<b>How American poets have explored driving in all its facets</b> <p/> Whither goest thou America asked Jack Kerouac in <i>On the Road</i> in thy shiny car in the night? For American poets the act of driving has always harbored a critical dichotomy. It can express the thrill and the freedom of the open road but it can also foster fears of ecological catastrophe crashes and police violence. In <i>Poetic Drive</i> Joel Duncan examines the writings and experimental film collaborations of William Carlos Williams Charles Olson Frank O'Hara Eileen Myles and Claudia Rankine to show that while poets have consistently inhabited the driver's seat as a vehicle for self-possession they have also reckoned with the social exclusions and environmental destruction central to American automobility. These poets have at times left their cars behind as stalled junk or simply stopped driving them mourning the forms of violence they encountered behind the wheel. <p/> While previous studies have considered road novels and films <i>Poetic Drive</i> is the first book to explore how American poets have harnessed the contradictory nature of automobility in crafting new work. By tracking poets' vexed engagements with automobility over more than a century Duncan offers a unique contribution to ecopoetics and petrocultures scholarship that expands our understanding of the place of driving in American literature and culture.
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.