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University of Massachusetts Press

Wild Intelligence: Poets' Libraries and the Politics of Knowledge in Postwar America

Wild Intelligence: Poets' Libraries and the Politics of Knowledge in Postwar America

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Information science was a burgeoning field in the early years of the Cold War, and while public and academic libraries acted as significant sites for the information boom, it is unsurprising that McCarthyism and censorship would shape what they granted readers access to and acquired. Wild Intelligence traces a different history of information management, examining the privately assembled collections of poets and their knowledge-building practices at midcentury.

Taking up case studies of four poets who began writing during the 1950s and 1960s, including Charles Olson (1910-1970), Diane di Prima (1934-2020), Gerrit Lansing (1928-2018), and Audre Lorde (1934-1992), M. C. Kinniburgh shows that the postwar American poet's library should not just be understood according to individual books within their collection but rather as an archival resource that reveals how poets managed knowledge in a growing era of information overload. Exploring traditions and systems that had been overlooked, buried, occulted, or censored, these poets sought to recover a sense of history and chart a way forward.



Author: M. C. Kinniburgh
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Published: 05/27/2022
Series: Studies in Print Culture and the History of the Book
Pages: 192
Weight: 1.35lbs
Size: 8.90h x 5.98w x 0.71d
ISBN: 9781625346551
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