Status: not signed in | Register | Sign In | My Account | View Cart | Log Off | Contact Mellen

|
The Life and Poetry of John Beecher (1904-1980): Advocate of Poetry as a Spoken Art DescriptionThis work is a two-part overview to this writer, poet, journalist, activist, and sociologist. The introduction covers some background on how scholars and academics have neglected Beecher, for a variety of possible reasons. Part one consists of a biography that centers on Beecher’s working life, only briefly discussing his four marriages and only mentioning that he had four children. Part two covers a sampling of his poetry, offering explications and critical analysis that point to the conclusion that Beecher should not have been neglected or omitted from literary study to the extent that he has been. The afterword discusses the author’s experiences during his research process, including meeting Beecher’s widow Barbara. Overall, the work is intended to reintroduce John Beecher to the literary community and incite further discussion about him.
Reviews“In addition to the life, Dickson explicates the poetry, in the context of critical condemnation, and sometimes, of praise. It is remarkable that using the same English language, critics could produce such wildly varying judgments. Dickson carefully and diligently explores the development and promulgation of “the canon,” so devised by bourgeois scholars as to entirely exclude Beecher, and others who shared his aesthetics. Bizarrely, these adverse critics denied that Beecher had an aesthetic, or was even a poet at all.” – Fred Whitehead, Ph.D., Columbia University
Table of ContentsForeword by Dr. Fred Whitehead
ISBN10: 0-7734-4654-0 ISBN13: 978-0-7734-4654-0 Pages: 148 Year: 2009
|