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Jordan Davis on Thomas Sayers Ellis in The Nation.

December 22, 2010 \pm\31 6:16 pm

Literary history, at least as far as race in America is concerned, is stuck, and the doctrine of separate but equal has to be overturned again and again, with every book published. If the doctrine were dead, then it would be common knowledge that Robert Hayden is at least as remarkable a poet as Robert Lowell, or that the Hugheses—Ted and Langston—run about even; or that it would be ignorant of a young poet to study Elizabeth Bishop to the exclusion of Rita Dove, or vice versa. It would also finally be possible to assess the claim that Amiri Baraka’s work—his early work as LeRoi Jones, anyway—outdoes them all.

Read the rest here. I’ve said before and I’ll say it again: Jordan Davis is the best poetry critic in America, hands down.

2 Comments
  1. December 22, 2010 \pm\31 8:43 pm 8:43 pm

    This is so exciting!

  2. December 23, 2010 \pm\31 12:39 pm 12:39 pm

    TSE knows where it’s at & what it is.

    Mr. Davis too.

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