<span>Humor, Empathy, and Community in Twentieth-Century American Poetry</span><span> explores how American poets of the last hundred years have used laughter to create communities of readers and writers. For poets slightly outside of the literary or social mainstream, humor encourages mutual unders
Humor, Empathy, and Community in Twentieth-Century American Poetry
✍ Scribed by Rachel Trousdale
- Publisher
- OUP Oxford
- Year
- 2021
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 288
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Humor, Empathy, and Community in Twentieth-Century American Poetry explores how American poets of the last hundred years have used laughter to create communities of readers and writers. For poets slightly outside of the literary or social mainstream, humor encourages mutual understanding and empathic insight among artist, audience, and subject. As a result, laughter helps poets reframe and reject literary, political, and discursive hierarchies--whether to overturn those hierarchies, or to place themselves at the top.
While theorists like Freud and Bergson argue that laughter patrols and maintains the boundary between in-group and out-group, this volume shows how laughter helps us cross or re-draw those boundaries. Poets who practice such constructive humor promote a more democratic approach to laughter. Humor reveals their beliefs about their audiences and their attitudes toward the Romantic notion that poets are exceptional figures. When poets use humor to promote empathy, they suggest that poetry's ethical function is tied to its structure: empathy, humor, and poetry identify shared patterns among apparently disparate objects.
This book explores a broad range of serious approaches to laughter: the inclusive, community-building humor of W. H. Auden and Marianne Moore; the self-aggrandizing humor of Ezra Pound; the self-critical humor of T. S. Eliot; Sterling Brown's antihierarchical comedy; Elizabeth Bishop's attempts to balance mockery with sympathy; and the comic epistemologies of Lucille Clifton, Stephanie Burt, Cathy Park Hong, and other contemporary poets. It charts a developing poetics of laughter in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, showing how humor can be deployed to embrace, to exclude, and to transform.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Humor, Empathy, and Community in Twentieth-Century American Poetry
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Permissions
Introduction: Humor and Empathy
1. Theories of Humor: Superiority
2. Theories of Humor: Incongruity
3. Theories of Humor: Relief Theory
4. Laughter and Humanity
5. Feminism and Humor
6. Race, Ethnicity, and Outsider Humor
7. Laughter and National Identity
8. Empathy and Sympathy
9. Empathy and Morality
10. Humor and Empathy
11. About this Book
1: “Tell me the Truth: ”Humor, Love, and Community in Auden’s Late-Thirties Poetry
1. Posing the Problem: Light Verse and the Poet’s Community
2. Letters from Iceland, Lineage, and Auden’s Audience
3. Humor Against Fascism
4. The Individual in the Group
5. The Individual in Love
6. “Individual Beauty” and Comic Community
2: “Humor Saves Steps”: Laughter and Humanity in Marianne Moore
1. Moore’s Early Empathic Satires
2. Play and Identity in “A Prize Bird” and “The Wood-Weasel”
3. Humor in “The Pangolin”
3: Distance, and Intimacy, and T. S. Eliot’s Self-Critical Laughter
1. Eliot’s Light Verse
2. Humor in Eliot’s Essays
3. Prufrock and Others
4. The Waste Land
4: “Shocked at my Levity”: Humor and Immortality in Ezra Pound
1. Pound’s Humor Before the Cantos
2. Humor in the Cantos
3. Historicity and the Comic Artist-Hero
4. Ethnic Humor and Re-Drawing the Borders
5. Artistic Hierarchies and Comic Immortality in the Pisan Cantos
6. Fascism and Including the Audience
7. The Pound-Eliot Letters
5: Sterling Brown’s Laughter Out of Hell
1. Questions of Audience in Black Humor
2. Sterling Brown’s Semi-Privacy
3. Slim Greer and the Rejection of Hierarchies
4. Laughter and Insight
6: Elizabeth Bishop’s Equivocal Communions
1. The Joking Voice: Humor and Self-Revelation
2. Sympathy, Mockery, and Friendship
3. Pink Dogs and Unfunny Uncles: Humor, Intelligence, and Self-Construction
4. Humor and Love
7: Laughter and Knowledge in Contemporary Poetry
1. Raymond McDaniel’s Comics Adaptations
2. Stephanie Burt’s Comic Invitations
3. Cathy Park Hong’s Games of Context
4. Albert Goldbarth’s Comedies of Science
5. Kim Rosenfield’s Comic Judgments
6. The Gun Joke and the Rape Joke
7. Lucille Clifton and the Limits of Empathy
8. Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
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