Abstract

This epigraph, the inspiration for my title, gives us a condensed version of one possible attitude toward poetry; an approach that situates poetic language not as outside of, but as part of a community of discourses. This is William Rowe's method in Poets of Contemporary Latin America: History and the Inner Life (and I borrow the quote from him). Rowe reads a constellation of poets who shift poetry's conventional boundaries to use their work as a means of thinking through contemporary issues; in the process, they alter our expectations as readers. All of the books under review form another kind of society of words, through the association of poets and critical approaches to poetry from the last several years. Their approaches to the genre range from traditional, author-centered biographical readings (Daniel R. Reedy on

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