Incarceration in the Poetry of Anna Mendelssohn
eBook - ePub

Incarceration in the Poetry of Anna Mendelssohn

Serve Your Own Sentences

  1. 264 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Incarceration in the Poetry of Anna Mendelssohn

Serve Your Own Sentences

About this book

The first full-length study of the poet, artist and activist Anna Mendelssohn (1948-2009), this book consolidates Mendelssohn's reputation as one of the most important avant-garde British poets of her generation and explores her contribution to the powerful tradition of women writing enclosure and escape. Mendelssohn was herself incarcerated in Holloway women's prison between 1971-76, and her bold and inventive poetry foregrounds and subverts, but does not triumphantly overcome, conditions of constraint. Informed by extensive original archival research, this book reads her highly experimental lyric alongside the poetry of her forerunners and contemporaries, including Nancy Cunard, Muriel Rukeyser and Denise Riley, restoring to view a lost network of radical, Jewish and feminist modernism. With chapters on the poetry of the Spanish Civil War, the legacy of the Holocaust, the Women's Liberation Movement, the transformation of HMP Holloway in the 1970s and prison abolitionism, Incarceration in the Poetry of Anna Mendelssohn illuminates the historical, political and literary contexts that shape this work and argues that Mendelssohn advances a poetics not of emancipation, but of abolition.

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Yes, you can access Incarceration in the Poetry of Anna Mendelssohn by Eleanor Careless in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literary Criticism in Poetry. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Halftitle Page
  3. Dedication Page
  4. Title Page
  5. Contents
  6. List of figures
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Introduction: ‘I understand the trap of systems’ – against an emancipatory poetics
  9. A note on method: Poetry’s makers
  10. 1 ‘Reading me through Guernica’: Lyric afterlives of the Spanish Civil War
  11. 2 ‘Nowhere short of Nuremberg’: A post-concentrationary poetics
  12. 3 ‘Feminized, although not without dissent’: Gender, lyric subjectivity and constraint
  13. 4 ‘Serve your own sentences’: Carceral poetry in the era of the therapeutic community
  14. Conclusion. Towards a poetics of abolition
  15. Bibliography
  16. Index
  17. Imprint