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Come Together: Imagine Peace (Harmony) - Livre de poche par Ann Smith - BON

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Lieu : Montgomery, Illinois, États-Unis
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Numéro de l'objet eBay :276455016702
Dernière mise à jour : juin 03, 2024 05:05:47 HAEAfficher toutes les modificationsAfficher toutes les modifications

Caractéristiques de l'objet

État
Bon: Un livre qui a été lu, mais qui est en bon état. La couverture présente des dommages infimes, ...
Brand
Unbranded
MPN
Does not apply
ISBN
9781933964225
Book Title
Come Together: Imagine Peace : Poems
Book Series
Harmony Anthology Ser.
Item Length
9 in
Publisher
Bottom DO&G Press
Publication Year
2008
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Illustrator
Yes
Item Height
0.5 in
Author
William Stafford
Genre
Poetry, Social Science, Philosophy
Topic
Anthologies (Multiple Authors), Ethics & Moral Philosophy, Violence in Society
Item Width
6 in
Item Weight
11 Oz
Number of Pages
208 Pages

À propos de ce produit

Product Information

100 poets voice their concern and vision for peace. Poems of Witness & Elegy, Exhortation & Action, Reconciliation, Shared Humanity, Wildness & Home, Ritual & Vigil, Meditation & Prayer. Precedents: Sappho, Whitman, Dickinson, Cavafy, Millay, Patchen, Rexroth, Shapiro, Lowell, Creeley, Rukeyser, Ginsberg, Levertov, Lorde, Stafford, Jordan, Amichai, Darwish Contemporaries: Abinader, Ali, Bass, Berry, Bauer, Berrigan, Bly, Bodhrn, Bradley, Brazaitis, Bright, Bryner, Budbill, Cervine, Charara, Cording, Cone, Crooker, Daniels, di Prima, Davis, Dougherty, Ellis, Espada, Estes, Ferlinghetti, Forch, Frost, Gibson, Gundy, Gilberg, Habra, Hague, Hamill, Harter, Hassler, Haven, Heyen, Hirshfield, Hughes, Joudah, Jensen, Karmin, Kendig, Komunyakaa, Kovacik, Kryss, Krysl, LaFemina, Landis, Leslie, Lifshin, Loden, Lovin, Lucas, McCallum, McGuane, Machan, McQuaid, Meek, Metres, Miltner, Montgomery, Norman, Nye, Pankey, Pendarvis, Pinsky, Porterfield, Prevost, Ragain, Rashid, Rich, Roffman, Rosen, Ross, Rusk, Salinger, Sanders, Seltzer, Schneider, Shabtai, Shannon, Sheffield, Shipley, Shomer, Silano, Sklar, Smith, Snyder, Spahr, Sydlik, Szymborska, Trommer, Twichell, Volkmer, Waters, Weems, Wilson, Zale

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Bottom DO&G Press
ISBN-10
1933964227
ISBN-13
9781933964225
eBay Product ID (ePID)
71229865

Product Key Features

Book Title
Come Together: Imagine Peace : Poems
Author
William Stafford
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Topic
Anthologies (Multiple Authors), Ethics & Moral Philosophy, Violence in Society
Publication Year
2008
Book Series
Harmony Anthology Ser.
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Poetry, Social Science, Philosophy
Number of Pages
208 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9 in
Item Height
0.5 in
Item Width
6 in
Item Weight
11 Oz

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
Series Volume Number
6
Reviews
Peace poetry is larger than a moral injunction against war; it is an articulation of the expanse, the horizon where we might come together. To adapt a line by the Sufi poet Rumi: beyond the realm of good and evil, there is a field.” —from the Introduction by Philip Metres, What strikes me now, with our nation still mired in two wars, is how much our own self-argument can come to silence us, and how we can become victims of our own narratives of despair. The poems of Come Together: Imagine Peace remind us that, though the work of peacemaking is never done, and though we face the most powerful forces in the world, we are not alone, and our voices bear the burden of the silenced throughout the globe....The work of peacemaking, and the work of peace poetry, is at least in part to give voice to those small victories—where no blood was spilled, but lives were changed, justice was won, and peace was forged, achieved, or found. And words bring us there, to the brink of something new. Peace poetry is larger than a moral injunction against war; it is an articulation of the expanse, the horizon where we might come together. To adapt a line by the Sufi poet Rumi: Beyond the realm of good and evil, there is a field. -from the "Introduction" by Philip Metres (September 2008), What strikes me now, with our nation still mired in two wars, is how much our own self-argument can come to silence us, and how we can become victims of our own narratives of despair. The poems of Come Together: Imagine Peace remind us that, though the work of peacemaking is never done, and though we face the most powerful forces in the world, we are not alone, and our voices bear the burden of the silenced throughout the globe....The work of peacemaking, and the work of peace poetry, is at least in part to give voice to those small victories—where no blood was spilled, but lives were changed, justice was won, and peace was forged, achieved, or found. And words bring us there, to the brink of something new. Peace poetry is larger than a moral injunction against war; it is an articulation of the expanse, the horizon where we might come together. To adapt a line by the Sufi poet Rumi: Beyond the realm of good and evil, there is a field.” -from the "Introduction" by Philip Metres (September 2008), What strikes me now, with our nation still mired in two wars, is how much our own self-argument can come to silence us, and how we can become victims of our own narratives of despair. The poems of Come Together: Imagine Peace remind us that, though the work of peacemaking is never done, and though we face the most powerful forces in the world, we are not alone, and our voices bear the burden of the silenced throughout the globe....The work of peacemaking, and the work of peace poetry, is at least in part to give voice to those small victories--where no blood was spilled, but lives were changed, justice was won, and peace was forged, achieved, or found. And words bring us there, to the brink of something new. Peace poetry is larger than a moral injunction against war; it is an articulation of the expanse, the horizon where we might come together. To adapt a line by the Sufi poet Rumi: "Beyond the realm of good and evil, there is a field." -from the "Introduction" by Philip Metres (September 2008), What strikes me now, with our nation still mired in two wars, is how much our own self-argument can come to silence us, and how we can become victims of our own narratives of despair. The poems of Come Together: Imagine Peace remind us that, though the work of peacemaking is never done, and though we face the most powerful forces in the world, we are not alone, and our voices bear the burden of the silenced throughout the globe....The work of peacemaking, and the work of peace poetry, is at least in part to give voice to those small victorieswhere no blood was spilled, but lives were changed, justice was won, and peace was forged, achieved, or found. And words bring us there, to the brink of something new. Peace poetry is larger than a moral injunction against war; it is an articulation of the expanse, the horizon where we might come together. To adapt a line by the Sufi poet Rumi: Beyond the realm of good and evil, there is a field.-from the "Introduction" by Philip Metres (September 2008)
Table of Content
Come Together: Imagine Peace Table of Contents 11... Preface by Larry and Ann Smith 13... Introduction by Philip Metres Section One: Some Precedents 25...Sappho, Some say a host of ships…” 26...Walt Whitman, As I Ponder’d in Silence” 26...Emily Dickinson, Poem #739 27...Edna St. Vincent Millay, Conscientious Objector” 27...C. P. Cavafy, Waiting for the Barbarians” 29...Kenneth Patchen, Creation” 30...Kenneth Rexroth, August 22, 1939” 83...Karl Shapiro, The Conscientious Objector” 34...Robert Lowell, Fall 1961” 35...Robert Creeley, For No Clear Reason” 35...Muriel Rukeyser, Poem 36...William Stafford, At the Un-National Monument along the Canadian Border” 36...William Stafford, Watching the Jet Planes Dive” 37...William Stafford, Peace Walk” 37...Denise Levertov, Making Peace” 38...Denise Levertov, The Altars in the Street” 39...Allen Ginsberg, from Wichita Vortex Sutra” 40...Audre Lorde, A Litany for Survival” 42...June Jordan, The Bombing of Baghdad” 45...Yehuda Amichai, Wildpeace” 46...Mahmoud Darwish, from State of Siege” Section Two: The Story So Far: Poems of Witness & Elegy 51...Shara McCallum, The Story So Far” 52...Karen Kovacik, Requiem for the Buddhas of Bamiyan” 53...Wislawa Szymborska, The End and the Beginning” 55...Jon Volkmer, At the Museum of Archeology” 56...Maj Ragain, Willow” 57...Jack McGuane, Bones of a Crow” 58...Lyn Lifshin, E Mail Message” 59...Sam Hamill, True Peace” * 6 * 61...Jeanne Shannon, Why I Wrote Out by Hand Ronald Johnson’s The Book of the Green Man on an Autumn Evening in 1970” 63...Carolyn Forché, Because One Is Always Forgotten” 64...John Bradley, Bosnian Love Poem” 64...David Sklar & Geoffrey A. Landis, Intelligent War Machine” 65...Steve Wilson, Ghazal: The Footbridge Over the Somes” 65...Michael Salinger, 911” 66...Joseph Ross, On a Sign Announcing: Expanding Arlington National Cemetery” 68...Eric Pankey, History” Section Three: Call and Answer: Poems of Exhortation & Action 71...Robert Bly, Call and Answer” 71...Adrienne Rich, from An Atlas of the Difficult World” 73...William Heyen, (The Truth)” 74...Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Populist Manifesto No. 1” 77...Angele Ellis, Federal Building” 78...Philip Metres, from For the Fifty (Who Made PEACE With Their Bodies)” 79...Robert Pinsky, Stupid Meditation on Peace” 80...Martín Espada, The God of the Weather-Beaten Face” 82...Ed Sanders, July 4, 2008” 82...Enid Shomer, Passive Resistance” 84...Edwina Pendarvis, Victory” 85...Rachel Loden, My Test Market” 86...Diane Kendig, Spring 1971 Washington D.C.” 87...Lauren Rusk, The People Who Pass By” 88...Edward A. Dougherty, The Fountain” 89...Liane Ellison Norman, Maya Weiss Organizes an Anti-War Rally in January 2007” 90...Susan Rich, Her Favorite Somali Fable Told to Her by Her Grandmother” 92...Jim Daniels, Reincarnation of the Peace Sign” Section Four: Healing the Breach: Poems of Reconciliation 95...Robert Cording, Christmas Soccer Game” 96...Naomi Shihab Nye, Jerusalem” * 7 * 97...Diane di Prima, On the Way Home: A Prayer for the Road” 99....Aharon Shabtai, The Victory of Beit Jalla” 100...Aharon Shabtai, Lotem Abdel Shafi” 101...Allen Frost, Uncle Charley” 101...Mark Brazaitis, We Need a War” 102...Gail Hosking Gilberg, Teacups in the Air” 103...Joanne Seltzer, Making Peace in Jerusalem” 103...Emily K. Bright, At the State Correctional Facility” 104...Mari
Copyright Date
2008

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