
The terror of our days
By Harriet L. Parmet
Subjects: American poetry, history and criticism, 20th century, Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature, Literature and the war, Criticism and interpretation, World War, 1939-1945, Jews in literature, History and criticism, American poetry, History, Literature and society
Description: "The Holocaust remains incomprehensible to the world at large and without a compelling claim on most people's lives. By contrast the term "Holocaust" occupies a central place in Jewish vocabulary, and it is kept current in American letters and film. This book reflects on and analyzes poetry by four contemporary Americans - Sylvia Plath, William Heyen, Gerald Stern, and Jerome Rothenberg - none of whom directly experienced the war of annihilation directed against European Jewry. For these poets, who must accommodate what they cannot ignore or deny, writing becomes a moral obligation as commemoration, catharsis, atonement, history, insistence on human sensitivities, resistance to brutalization, indifference, and flight from consequences."--BOOK JACKET.
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