SOMEONE SHOT MY BOOK

Someone Shot My Book

University of Michigan Press, 2018

Approaching the practices of reading and writing from a feminist perspective, Julie Carr asks vital ethical questions about the role of poetry—and of art in general—in a violent culture. She addresses issues such as the art of listening, the body and the avant-garde, gun violence, police brutality, reading and protest, and feminist responses to war in essays that are lucid, inventive, and informed by a life lived with poetry. Essays on poets Lorine Niedecker, Jean Valentine, Anne Carson, Lyn Hejinian, and Lisa Robertson detail some of the political, emotional, and spiritual work of these forerunners. A former dancer, Carr also takes up question of text, dance, performance, and race in an essay on the work of choreographer, writer, and visual artist Ralph Lemon and poet Fred Moten.

Carr's essays push past familiar boundaries between the personal/confessional and experimental/conceptual strains in American poetry. Pressing philosophical inquiries into the nature of gender, motherhood, fear, the body, and violence up against readings of twentieth- and twenty-first-century poets, she asks us to consider the political and affective work of poetry in a range of contexts. Carr reports on her own practices, examining her concerns for research and narrative against her investment in lyric, as well as her history as a dancer and her work as curator and publisher. Carr's breadth of inquiry moves well beyond the page, yet remains grounded in languages possibilities.

KYLAN RICE’S ESSAY DISCUSSING SOMEONE SHOT MY BOOK IN WEST BRANCH

 REVIEWS

“In several of the essays, Carr approaches the problem of violence against women and children with a passion that borders on religious enthusiasm. At the same time Carr comes up against the temptation of idealism: to imagine life without violence can sometimes lead one to imagine life without loss, even when life presupposes loss.”

TYRONE WILLIAMS FOR POETRY FOUNDATION

 

"Carr’s robust and radical poetic vision is immanent throughout. She voices a powerful apology for songs of experience, insisting on the details of life in poetry, anchoring the natural province of such work in women’s writing."

KYLAN RICE FOR JACKET2

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