Abbreviations Introduction 1: Situation the Avant-Garde in Postwar America Community, Individualism, and Cold War Culture 2: Emerson, Pragmatism, and the "New American Poetry" 3: "My Force Is in Mobility" Selfhood and Friendship in Frank O'Hara's Poetry 4: Growing Up with Our Brothers All Around John Ashbery and the Interpersonal 5: Amiri Baraka and the Poetics of Turning Away 6: "Against the Speech of Friends" Baraka's White Friend Blues 7: "A Rainy Wool Frankie and Johnny" O'Hara, Ashbery, and the Paradoxes of Friendship Conclusion Notes Works Cited Index
Andrew Epstein is Associate Professor of English at Florida State University.
"Excellent study."--The New Yorker
"Epstein's close readings of individual poems are shart and
trenchant.... Most engaging of all are the sections in which
Epstein explores the poets'intertextual and collaborative processes
in depth, especially when he cites unpublished documents such as a
wonderful letter-poem to Kenneth Koch co-written by Ashbery and
O'Hara, which he reprints in full."--K. Silem Mohammad, Poetry
Project Newsletter
"An intriguing book."--Elizabeth Robinson, Rain Taxi
"Epstein offers superb close readings of individual works as they
relate to the biographical, philosophical, and cultural background
of the three poets. This is an enlightened and enlightening study
of O'Hara, Ashbery, and Baraka in particular and of postmodern
poetries in general. Highly recommended."--R.T. Prus, Choice
"The premise is simple - John Ashbery and Frank O'Hara were
frenemies, as were O'Hara and LeRoi Jones (now Amiri Baraka) - but
Epstein handles it with such care and intelligence, that his study
ends up revealing a great deal about the American midcentury
avant-gard... Never before have they been presented in such
painstaking detail, backed by a wealth of letters and readings of
the poets' verse that are patient in the explication, and in their
refusal to draw
easy conclusions about the nature of the relationships under
discussion. Anyone with an interest in the ways great poetry
depends on complex and extraordinary relationships will find this
book deeply
rewarding."--Publishers Weekly
"Beautiful Enemies charts the fascinating tensions between
individual and community in the New York poetry world of
mid-century. For post-World War II poets, friendship was at once
the engine that made poetry come alive, and yet it could also be
confining and oppressive-- the source of competition as well as
nourishment. Andrew Epstein examines the role community played in
the forging of New York poetics--a poetics that cannot be
dissociated from its
relation to Cold War politics. His is a fascinating, beautifully
documented investigation, both of individual poems and of the
interlocking friendships that animated their production."
--Marjorie Perloff, author
of Frank O'Hara, Poet Among Painters
"In Beautiful Enemies, Andrew Epstein offers exemplary Emersonian
readings of the intricate web connecting individual talent and
collective investment in the poetry and poetics of John Ashbery,
Frank O'Hara, and Amiri Baraka. Averting the Cold War myth of the
individual voice in the wilderness of conformity, Epstein gives us
voices in conversation and conflict, suggesting that resistance to
agreement is at the heart of a pragmatist understanding of
literary community." --Charles Bernstein, Donald T. Regan Professor
of English, University of Pennsylvania
"[A] fascinating reading of the artistically generative conflicts
between self and friendship in O'Hara's life and work. Epstein is
uniquely alive to the tensions legible in these poetic
continuations of friendship, and this attentiveness, along with his
assiduous scholarship, yields results that should change the way
the works, their creators, and their milieu are viewed."- Libbie
Rifkin, Contemporary Literature
"Andrew Epstein's marvelous book, Beautiful Enemies, takes the
conundrum of literary friendship to a whole new level...no one has
written so thoroughly, or so lucidly, about the contested nature of
friendship in avant-garde circles as Epstein has."-Timothy Gray,
Zen Monster
"Epstein's elegant book offers a subtle and meticulously researched
account of the literary, personal, and philosophical dynamics of
the New York School, and of O'Hara, John Ashbery, and Amiri Baraka
in particular."-Benjamin Lee, Criticism
"Clear and nuanced...evocatively weaving together the poets' lives,
letters, and poetry. Persuasively argued and beautifully
written...a model for how friendship and literature may usefully
illuminate one another." --American Literature
"Epstein's argument is immensely satisfying in the way it
constellates a number of related contexts...[his] argument about
individual poets in productive friction with their friends and
collaborators is masterful. He produces strong readings of major
works of these writers...Epstein's book is, simply put, a pleasure
to read." --American Literary History
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