Summary
Praise for the print edition:
"...accessible, interesting, and informative...Recommended..."—Booklist
"...a current and comprehensive reference source on American poetry...recommended..."—Library Journal
Encyclopedia of American Poetry, Second Edition is an indispensable encyclopedic guide to American poetry with more than 1,100 entries, ranging in length from 500 to more than 3,500 words. This updated and invaluable resource explores the various writers, works, themes, and movements of this intriguing literary genre, with entries on poems and poets before 1900 as well as more than 100 entries on important poems and recent poets.
Coverage includes:
- Poets, representing a range of styles, influences, and ethnicities, from the Puritan period to today's avant-garde and from the most widely studied and anthologized to the obscure but influential
- Major poems
- Important literary schools and movements in American poetry, including Abolitionist, Transcendentalist, Romantic, Beat, Imagist, Fugitive, Black Mountain, Deep Image, Objectivist, Language, and others
- Influential periodicals, critical essays, and poetry collections
- Major poetry awards and societies.
About the Author(s)
Burt Kimmelman holds a Ph.D. in English from the City University of New York and is a professor of English at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. Among his books are The "Winter Mind": William Bronk and American Letters and The Poetics of Authorship in the Later Middle Ages: The Emergence of the Modern Literary Persona. He has published scores of essays on American poets and poetry, as well as several collections of his own poems.
Temple Cone holds a Ph.D. in English from the University of Wisconsin and is an assistant professor of English at the United States Naval Academy. He is the author of Considerations of Earth and Sky, a collection of poems.
Randall Huff holds a Ph.D. in English from the University of Southern California and recently retired from university teaching. He is the author of many scholarly articles and The Revolutionary War Era, a study of popular culture during the period.