Examining contemporary poetry by way of ethnicity and gender, Kenneth Lincoln tracks the Renaissance invention of the Wild Man and the recurrent Adamic myth of the lost Garden. He discusses the first anthology of American Indian verse,The Path on the Rainbow(1918), which opened Jorge Luis Borges' university surveys of American literature, to thirty-five contemporary Indian poets who speak to, with, and against American mainstream bards. From Whitman's free verse, through the Greenwich Village Renaissance (sandwiched between the world wars) and the post-apocalyptic Beat incantations, to transglobal questions of tribe and verse at the century's close, Lincoln shows where we mine the mother lode of New World voices, what distinguishes American verse, which tales our poets sing and what inflections we hear in the rhythms, pitches, and parsings of native lines.
Lincoln presents the Lakota concept of singing with the heart of a bear as poetry which movesthroughan artist. He argues for a fusion of estranged cultures, tribal and ?migr?, margin and mainstream, in detailing the ethnopoetics of Native American translation and the growing modernist concern for a native sense of the makings of American verse. This fascinating work represents a major new effort in understanding American and Native American literature, spirituality, and culture.
Kenneth Lincolnis Professor of English at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is the author ofA Writer's China(1999),Men Down West(1997),Indi'n Humor(1993),The Good Red Road: Passages into Native America(1987), andNative American Renaissance(1983).
[Lincoln] invites fresh readings of the 'mainstream' poets, introduces literary scholars to useful critical viewpoints rarely encountered in English departments, provokes our historical imaginations with unexpected comparisons, and offers a sustained response to critics and authors who adl3-