The Work of Poetry

Front Cover
Columbia University Press, 1997 - 318 pages

The U.S. occupation of Japan transformed a brutal war charged with overt racism into an amicable peace in which the issue of race seemed to have disappeared. During the Occupation, the problem of racial relations between Americans and Japanese was suppressed and the mutual racism transformed into something of a taboo so that the two former enemies could collaborate in creating democracy in postwar Japan. In the 1980s, however, when Japan increased its investment in the American market, the world witnessed a revival of the rhetoric of U.S.-Japanese racial confrontation.

Koshiro argues that this perceived economic aggression awoke the dormant racism that lay beneath the deceptively smooth cooperation between the two cultures.

This pathbreaking study is the first to explore the issue of racism in U.S.-Japanese relations. With access to unexplored sources in both Japanese and English, Koshiro is able to create a truly international and cross-cultural study of history and international relations.

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Contents

Three A Poetry of Restitution 39
Five Dreaming Poetry 78
Seven Hearing and Overhearing the Psalms 113
Eight On A Childs Garden of Verses 129
viii
Ten Discovering Wallace Stevens 152
Twelve Whitmans Difficult Availability 177
On Dante Gabriel Rossetti 190
Carrolls Quest Romance 200
Sixteen Merediths Poetry 215
A Late Appreciation 235
Twentyone Elizabeth Bishops Mappings of Life 280
Index 307
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About the author (1997)

John Hollander has edited several Everyman's Library Pocket Poet volumes, including "Robert Frost", "Christmas Poems", "War Poems", "Marriage Poems", "Animal Poems", & "Garden Poems". He is the A. Bartlett Biamatti Professor of English at Yale University, & the author of numerous books of poetry & criticism. He was made a MacArthur Fellow in 1990.

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