The Juniper Cure
This collection of poetry explores the intersections between devotion and loss, anger and guilt, grief and hope. While some poems are buttressed by straightforward narratives, others are more impressionistic. The poems strive for precision in language, simple musicality, and...
Other Authors: | |
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Format: | Others |
Language: | English English |
Published: |
Florida State University
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Online Access: | http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_2016SP_Boles_fsu_0071N_13256 |
Summary: | This collection of poetry explores the intersections between devotion and loss, anger and guilt, grief and hope. While some
poems are buttressed by straightforward narratives, others are more impressionistic. The poems strive for precision in language, simple
musicality, and emotional resonance. This collection also attempts a wide lens, a focus which looks outside of the speakers' individual
experience and interior emotionality, and toward the chaotic world in which a work like this is created. In developing my poetic stance,
I've wrestled with Shelly's claim that "poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world." On the other hand, Auden admonishes that
"poetry makes nothing happen." There appears to be some middle ground between these sentiments, and I find my poetry exploring that
mid-space. Studding the outskirts of the manuscript are poems about war and religion; environmental degradation and disaster; and the
commonplace violence that is an ever increasing aspect of our country and world. The title poem in the collection, which serves as a
centerpiece for the work, is a meditation on memory as it pertains to the dementia suffered by the speaker's father at the end of his
life. This relationship reoccurs throughout the collection, and is the subject behind the emotional core of the thesis. More broadly, the
notions of loss and endings permeate the other poems presented in the collection. The dissolution of relationships, and the guilt, regret,
and anger that go along with these moments between people inform many of the manuscript's poems. Images and ideas that point to disruption
and instability are centrally figured. === A Thesis submitted to the Department of English in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the
degree of Master of Fine Arts. === Spring Semester 2016. === April 6, 2016. === poetry === Includes bibliographical references. === James Kimbrell, Professor Directing Thesis; David Kirby, Committee Member; Andrew Epstein,
Committee Member. |
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