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Jazz - General & Miscellaneous, 20th Century American Literature - General & Miscellaneous - Literary Criticism, Feminist Literary Criticism, Art & Literature, Poetic Theory, African American Literature - Literary Criticism, Music - History & Criticism, F
Post-Jazz Poetics: A Social History by Jennifer D. Ryan — book cover

Post-Jazz Poetics: A Social History

by Jennifer D. Ryan
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Overview

African-American expressive arts draw upon multiple traditions of formal experimentation in the service of social change. Within these traditions, Jennifer D. Ryan demonstrates that black women have created literature, music, and political statements signifying some of the most incisive and complex elements of modern American culture.  Post-Jazz Poetics: A Social History examines the jazz-influenced work of five twentieth-century African-American women poets: Sherley Anne Williams, Sonia Sanchez, Jayne Cortez, Wanda Coleman, and Harryette Mullen.  These writers’ engagements with jazz-based compositional devices represent a new strand of radical black poetics, while their renditions of local-to-global social critique sketch the outlines of a transnational feminism.

Synopsis

African-American expressive arts draw upon multiple traditions of formal experimentation in the service of social change. Within these traditions, Jennifer D. Ryan demonstrates that black women have created literature, music, and political statements signifying some of the most incisive and complex elements of modern American culture.  Post-Jazz Poetics: A Social History examines the jazz-influenced work of five twentieth-century African-American women poets: Sherley Anne Williams, Sonia Sanchez, Jayne Cortez, Wanda Coleman, and Harryette Mullen.  These writers’ engagements with jazz-based compositional devices represent a new strand of radical black poetics, while their renditions of local-to-global social critique sketch the outlines of a transnational feminism.

About the Author, Jennifer D. Ryan

Jennifer D. Ryan is Assistant Professor of English at Buffalo State College.  She has published essays in Modern Fiction Studies, Feminist Teacher, Women and Performance, and The Geographical Imagination of Annie Proulx: Rethinking Regionalism.  Her next project is a study of emerging revisionist trends in biographical criticism of the Confessional poets.

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Book Details

Published
May 1, 2010
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Pages
240
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780230623156

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