In this Book

summary
From Sylvia Plath’s depictions of the Holocaust as a group of noncohering “bits” to AIDS elegies’ assertions that the dead posthumously persist in ghostly form and Susan Howe’s insistence that the past can be conveyed only through juxtaposed “scraps,” the condition of being too late is one that haunts post-World War II American poetry. This is a poetry saturated with temporal delay, partial recollection of the past, and the revelation that memory itself is accessible only in obstructed and manipulated ways. These postwar poems do not merely describe the condition of lateness: they enact it literally and figuratively by distorting chronology, boundary, and syntax, by referring to events indirectly, and by binding the condition of lateness to the impossibility of verifying the past. The speakers of these poems often indicate that they are too late by repetitively chronicling distorted events, refusing closure or resolution, and forging ghosts out of what once was tangible.

Ghostly Figures contends that this poetics of belatedness, along with the way it is bound to questions of poetic making, is a central, if critically neglected, force in postwar American poetry. Discussing works by Sylvia Plath, Adrienne Rich, Jorie Graham, Susan Howe, and a group of poets responding to the AIDS epidemic, Ann Keniston draws on and critically assesses trauma theory and psychoanalysis, as well as earlier discussions of witness, elegy, lyric trope and figure, postmodernism, allusion, and performance, to define the ghosts that clearly dramatize poetics of belatedness throughout the diverse poetry of post–World War II America.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright, Dedication
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  1. Contents
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. ix-x
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  1. Permissions
  2. pp. xi-xiv
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  1. Introduction. “Not needed except as meaning”: Memory and Belatedness in Postwar American Poetry
  2. pp. 1-30
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  1. 1. The Holocaust Again: Literal and Figurative Fragmentation in Sylvia Plath’s Ariel
  2. pp. 31-60
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  1. 2. “To feel with a human stranger”: Address and Asymmetrical Witness in Adrienne Rich’s Dark Fields of the Republic
  2. pp. 61-90
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  1. 3. “I am the ghost who haunts us”: Prosopopoeia and the Poetics of Infection in AIDS Poetry
  2. pp. 91-122
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  1. 4. “Deep into the lateness now”: Likeness and Lateness in Jorie Graham’s Region of Unlikeness
  2. pp. 123-152
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  1. 5. “Spectral scraps”: Displacement, Metonymy, and the Elegiac in Susan Howe’s The Midnight
  2. pp. 153-180
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  1. Coda. “To begin the forgetting”: Belatedness beyond Memory
  2. pp. 181-194
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 195-216
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  1. Works Cited
  2. pp. 217-230
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 231-240
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  1. Other Works in the Series
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