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Killing Poetry Blackness And The Making Of Slam And Spoken Word Communities Javon Johnson

  • SKU: BELL-7158474
Killing Poetry Blackness And The Making Of Slam And Spoken Word Communities Javon Johnson
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Killing Poetry Blackness And The Making Of Slam And Spoken Word Communities Javon Johnson instant download after payment.

Publisher: Rutgers University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.51 MB
Pages: 172
Author: Javon Johnson
ISBN: 9780813580036, 081358003X
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

Killing Poetry Blackness And The Making Of Slam And Spoken Word Communities Javon Johnson by Javon Johnson 9780813580036, 081358003X instant download after payment.

In recent decades, poetry slams and the spoken word artists who compete in them have sparked a resurgent fascination with the world of poetry. However, there is little critical dialogue that fully engages with the cultural complexities present in slam and spoken word poetry communities, as well as their ramifications.
In Killing Poetry, renowned slam poet, Javon Johnson unpacks some of the complicated issues that comprise performance poetry spaces. He argues that the truly radical potential in slam and spoken word communities lies not just in proving literary worth, speaking back to power, or even in altering power structures, but instead in imagining and working towards altogether different social relationships. His illuminating ethnography provides a critical history of the slam, contextualizes contemporary black poets in larger black literary traditions, and does away with the notion that poetry slams are inherently radically democratic and utopic.
Killing Poetry—at times autobiographical, poetic, and journalistic—analyzes the masculine posturing in the Southern California community in particular, the sexual assault in the national community, and the ways in which related social media inadvertently replicate many of the same white supremacist, patriarchal, and mainstream logics so many spoken word poets seem to be working against. Throughout, Johnson examines the promises and problems within slam and spoken word, while illustrating how community is made and remade in hopes of eventually creating the radical spaces so many of these poets strive to achieve.

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