ABSTRACT

Poetry in English since the Second World War has produced a number of highly original narrative works, as diverse as Derek Walcott's Omeros, Ted Hughes' Gaudete and Anne Stevenson's Correspondences. At the same time, poetry in general has been permeated by narrative features, particularly those linguistic characteristics that Mikhail Bakhtin considered peculiar to the novel, and which he termed "dialogic". This book examines the narrative and dialogic elements in the work of a range of poets from Britain, America, Ireland, Australia and the Caribbean, including poetry from the immediate postwar years to the contemporary, and novel-like narratives to personal lyrics. Its unifying theme is the way in which these poets, with such contrasting styles and from such varied backgrounds, respond to and creatively adapt the language-worlds, and hence the social worlds in which they live. The volume includes a detailed bibliography to assist students in further study, and will be a valuable resource to undergraduate and postgraduate students of contemporary poetry.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter One|13 pages

Art and Populism: Larkin from the Margins

chapter Chapter Three|13 pages

Crow in its Time: Trickster Mythology and Black Comedy

chapter Chapter Four|11 pages

Hughes, Narrative and Lyric: an Analysis of Gaudete

chapter Chapter Five|12 pages

Against Confessionalism: Anne Stevenson’s Correspondences

chapter Chapter Six|18 pages

Utterance and Resistance: Geoffrey Hill

chapter Chapter Seven|18 pages

‘The Mulatto of Style’: Derek Walcott and Hybridity

chapter Chapter Eight|14 pages

Les Murray and the Vernacular Republic

chapter Chapter Ten|15 pages

Peter Redgrove: Composition as Transaction

chapter Chapter Thirteen|11 pages

Carol Ann Duffy: Outsideness and Nostalgia