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Dark Poetry and the Anti-Elegiac: Approaching the Unspeakable
- College Literature
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Volume 51, Number 2, Spring 2024
- pp. 233-265
- 10.1353/lit.2024.a924344
- Article
- Additional Information
- Purchase/rental options available:
Dark Tourism is a term associated with pilgrimages to places associated with the famous dead. "Dark Poetry" attempts to imagine, explore, or reanimate a dark event. Using Charles Reznikoff's Holocaust poetry and Mariko Nagai's collection, Irradiated Cities(2017) as examples, we discuss dark poetry's use of an anti-elegiac mode, which focuses on historical particularities in refashioning and problematizing dark events while employing numerous gaps and fragmentations. This poetry, often written by second-generation and non-survivor poets, approaches notions of the ineffable while providing an important bridge between incomprehensible events and the human imagination, and challenging language's capacity to comprehend the "unspeakable."



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