Aftermath: Thinking and Healing with Grass in Contemporary Poetry

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

This chapter attends to the regular presence of grass in poetry of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. From Walt Whitman and English war poetry to recent work by Oswald and Burnett, the poetry of grass works to articulate, obscure, and heal the marks of contemporary trauma. Grass also shapes the soundscapes and visual form of poetry to the extent that, as this chapter suggests, grass can be said to constitute the contemporary practice of composition itself. Like poetry, the green field works in and through trauma to find again new life after war and conquest, after personal loss. In its seemingly perpetual growing, grass finds in the poet new ways of making and responding.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCambridge Handbook of Literature and Plants
EditorsBonnie Lander Johnson
PublisherCambridge University Press
Chapter11
Pages213-230
Number of pages18
ISBN (Electronic)9781108942690
ISBN (Print)9781108837736
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Feb 2025

Keywords

  • literature
  • grass
  • nature writing
  • poetry
  • ecopoetics

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