Tomeki
Cover of Split-gut song

Split-gut song

Jean Toomer and the poetics of modernity

By Karen Jackson Ford

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Publish Date

2005

Publisher

University of Alabama Press,University Alabama Press

Language

eng

Pages

213

Description:

"Karen Jackson Ford contextualizes Jean Toomer's poetry, letters, and essays in the literary culture of his period and, through close readings of the poems, shows how they negotiate formal experimentation (imagism, fragmentation, dialect) and traditional African American forms (slave songs, field hollers, call-and-response sermons, lyric poetry). At the heart of Toomer's work is the paradox that poetry is both the saving grace of African American culture and that poetry cannot survive modernity. This contradiction, Ford argues, structures Cane, wherein traditional lyric poetry first flourishes, then falters, then falls silent." "The Toomer that Ford discovers in Split-Gut Song is a complicated, contradictory poet who brings his vexed experience and ideas of racial identity to both conventional lyric and experimental forms as he struggles to articulate his perplexed understanding of race and art in 20th-century America."--Jacket.