Poems from the women's movement / edited by Honor Moore

Book - 2009

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811.5408/Poems
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 811.5408/Poems Checked In
Subjects
Published
[New York, N.Y.] : Library of America [2009]
Language
English
Other Authors
Honor Moore, 1945- (-)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xxix, 238 pages : illustrations ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781598530421
  • The applicant / Sylvia Plath
  • The father of my country / Diane Wakoski
  • Kathe Kollwitz / Muriel Rukesyser
  • Not to be printed, not to said, not to be thought / Muriel Rukesyser
  • Planetarium / Adrienne Rich
  • Diving into the wreck / Adrienne Rich
  • Phantasia for Elvira Shatayev / Adrienne Rich
  • The ballad of the lonely masturbator / Anne Sexton
  • The anniversary / Alicia Ostriker
  • personal letter #2 / Sonia Sanchez
  • a poem for my father / Sonia Sanchez
  • Miscarriage / Alta
  • 10 commandments for liberation / Alta
  • Euridice / Alta
  • miss rosie / Lucille Clifton
  • the lost baby poem / Lucille Clifton
  • At the end of the affair / Maxine Kumin
  • O'Keeffe retrospective / May Swenson
  • Why I died / Erica Jong
  • Sappho's reply / Rita Mae Brown
  • I like to think of Harriet Tubman / Susan Griffin
  • Three poems for women / Susan Griffin
  • An answer to a man's question, "What can I do about women's liberation?" / Susan Griffin
  • Quotations from charwoman me / Robin Morgan
  • Matrilineal descent / Robin Morgan
  • Objets d'Art / Cynthia MacDonald
  • For my sister Molly who in the fifties / Alice Walker
  • "You say I am mysterious" / Elsa Gidlow
  • The nuisance / Marge Piercy
  • Rape poem / Marge Piercy
  • For Willyce / Pat Parker
  • Death camp / Irena Klepfisz
  • They did not build wings for them / Irena Klepfisz
  • Susan's photograph / Jean Valentine
  • Eat rice have faith in women / Fran Winant
  • Yesterday / Fran Winant
  • A woman is talking to death / Judy Grahn
  • Annunciation / Diane Di Prima
  • The history of my feeling / Kathleen Fraser
  • Semele recycled / Carolyn Kizer
  • Gesture / Beverly Dahlen
  • To my daughter the junkie on a train / Audre Lorde
  • A litany for survival / Audre Lorde
  • A poem for women in rage / Audre Lorde
  • Elegy / Marilyn Hacker
  • Poem: on declining values / June Jordan
  • Roman poem number six / June Jordan
  • Case in point / June Jordan
  • Living alone (I) / Denise Levertov
  • Living alone (II) / Denise Levertov
  • Epilogue / Denise Levertov
  • Rhyme of my inheritance / Joan Larkin
  • Song / Joan Larkin
  • Some unsaid things / Joan Larkin
  • Pomegranate / Louise Glück
  • Dedication to hunger / Louise Glück
  • Eve of Easter / Bernadette Mayer
  • Polemic #1 / Honor Moore
  • First time: 1950 / Honor Moore
  • "i am a woman in ice" / Martha Courtot
  • After touch / Jan Clausen
  • Lady tactics / Anne Waldman
  • Caritas / Olga Broumas
  • Burning the tomato worms / Carolyn Forche
  • A California girlhood / Alice Notley
  • The goddess who created this passing world / Alice Notley
  • "She had ruby red lacquer on her fingernails" / Maureen Owen
  • "Wanting you " / Maureen Owen
  • Honesty / Maureen Owen
  • Don't cheapen yourself / Jana Harris
  • Anti-short story / Rae Armantrout
  • Tone / Rae Armantrout
  • The nursery / Fanny Howe
  • In knowledge of young boys / Toi Derricotte
  • Women's work / Michelle Cliff
  • Nessie / Rachel Blau DuPlessis
  • Many junipers, heartbeats / Jane Miller
  • Under the Zanzariere / Jane Miller
  • Satan says / Sharon Olds
  • Coral Sea, 1945 / Carol Muske-Dures
  • Among women / Marie Ponsot
  • She lays / Molly Peacock
  • Metaphors of women / Katha Pollitt
  • The green notebook / Jane Cooper
  • San Sepolcro / Jorie Graham
  • Unleashed / Eileen Myles
  • Joan / Eileen Myles.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* In 1965, Sylvia Plath's posthumous Ariel took the literary world by storm with its fierce and undeniably female voice. For the next 15 years, America saw a historic outpouring of women's poetry supported by and supporting the women's movement. As editor Moore points out, poetry was vital to the movement, articulating previously unexpressed lives, empowering others as the poets found their own power. The young women then their fervent beauty is well captured in the cover image are grandmothers now; their feminism was declared unfashionable years ago, though abuses they sought to correct continue. Women poets are still read, reviewed, and taught less often than their male counterparts, and young women writers avoid seeming strident, a literary crime apparently worse than throttling the muse in the service of worldly ambition. Into such circumstances these direct, vibrant, potent, passionate, wild, strong, free, and freeing poems come less like a breath of fresh air than a strong wind. Women of that era will remember Marge Piercy's Rape Poem, ( Rape fattens on the fantasies of the normal male / like a maggot in garbage ), Adrienne Rich's Diving into the Wreck ( I come to explore the wreck. / The words are purposes. / The words are maps ), and Rita Mae Brown's Sappho's Reply ( An army of lovers shall not fail ). And all who missed these missiles and epistles then will find them still demanding and invigorating.--Monaghan, Patricia Copyright 2009 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.