Political activism in North American performative poetryFrom Walt Whitman to Allen Ginsberg

  1. Ortiz Barroso, Elisa
Dirixida por:
  1. Eusebio de Lorenzo Gómez Director

Universidade de defensa: Universidad Complutense de Madrid

Fecha de defensa: 22 de outubro de 2021

Tribunal:
  1. Isabel Durán Giménez-Rico Presidenta
  2. Carmen Méndez García Secretaria
  3. Cristina Alsina Rísquez Vogal
  4. Rodrigo Andrés Vogal
  5. Eulalia Piñero Gil Vogal
Departamento:
  1. Estudios Ingleses: Lingüística y Literatura

Tipo: Tese

Resumo

This dissertation has its first prompt in the common scholarly association between the two American poets Walt Whitman and Allen Ginsberg, who vindicated the oral character of poetry as an alternative path for political activism. The nationally tense historical moments they lived (Civil War, McCarthyism, Vietnam War) made them conceive their writing as a shortcut for the citizens’ complete emancipation within democracy. Both founded their ideas in the romantic conception of language, defined in literary theory by Jacques Derrida as pneumological and phonocentrist: it is in oral language and speech where the pure form of communication, the true meaning of what is said, resides. In poetry, these two authors find the key to fight, through a speech-based poetics, an alternative against the corrupted logocracy of the State. Thus, within the framework of their own political career as Americans, who came to exist with a speech act (the Declaration of Independence), Whitman and Ginsberg aim to point at and inaugurate from the performative act both the poet and the new and alternative nation.