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Battle Lines: Poetry and Mass Media in the U.S. Civil War
Contributor(s): Richards, Eliza (Author)
ISBN: 0812250699     ISBN-13: 9780812250695
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
OUR PRICE:   $66.45  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: December 2018
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | American - General
- Literary Criticism | Modern - 19th Century
- Literary Criticism | Poetry
Dewey: 811.409
LCCN: 2018019735
Physical Information: 1.1" H x 6.3" W x 9.1" (1.20 lbs) 256 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 19th Century
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

During the U.S. Civil War, a combination of innovative technologies and catastrophic events stimulated the development of news media into a central cultural force. Reacting to the dramatic increases in news reportage and circulation, poets responded to an urgent need to make their work immediately relevant to current events. As poetry's compressed forms traveled more quickly and easily than stories, novels, or essays through ephemeral print media, it moved alongside and engaged with news reports, often taking on the task of imagining the mental states of readers on receiving accounts from the war front. Newspaper and magazine poetry had long editorialized on political happenings--Indian wars, slavery and abolition, prison reform, women's rights--but the unprecedented scope of what has been called the first modern war, and the centrality of the issues involved for national futures, generated a powerful sense of single-mindedness among readers and writers that altered the terms of poetic expression.

In Battle Lines, Eliza Richards charts the transformation of Civil War poetry, arguing that it was fueled by a symbiotic relationship between the development of mass media networks and modern warfare. Focusing primarily on the North, Richards explores how poets working in this new environment mediated events via received literary traditions. Collectively and with a remarkable consistency, poems pulled out key features of events and drew on common tropes and practices to mythologize, commemorate, and ponder the consequences of distant battles. The lines of communication reached outward through newspapers and magazines to writers such as Dickinson, Whitman, and Melville, who drew their inspiration from their peers' poetic practices and reconfigured them in ways that bear the traces of their engagements.