<p>"Salvio's achievement in this book … is in making something intriguing and resonant out of inauspicious material. She is able to show how Sexton's damaged life, and the poetry which was her real focus, came together in the classroom in compelling, if not always happy or successful, ways." — Biography</p><p>"Our best teachers are dissonant and enigmatic figures; they haunt and inspire us with their strangeness and provoke in us anxious excitement and wild thoughts. Paula Salvio's engrossing meditation on the melancholic life and work of Anne Sexton stays close to this discomforting insistence. With sensitivity, insight, courage, and a writer's flair, Salvio presents a compelling study of Sexton's life that will provoke readers to be grateful for the power of creative, honest, and searching scholarship." — Deborah P. Britzman, author of Novel Education: Psychoanalytic Studies of Learning and Not Learning</p><p>"Who is the poet who teaches? When that poet is Sexton, Paula Salvio argues, the issue of teaching persona is never far from the center of the room. The fact that Sexton has never been studied through this lens is the first reason to read this book; the second is that Salvio teaches her readers more about Sexton, poetry, and teaching than any course I know." — Dawn Skorczewski, author of Teaching One Moment at a Time: Disruption and Repair in the Classroom</p>

The poet's life as a teacher.

Winner of the 2008 Critics' Choice Award presented by the American Educational Studies Association

A Pulitzer Prize–winning poet who confessed the unrelenting anguish of addiction and depression, Anne Sexton (1928–1974) was also a dedicated teacher. In this book, Paula M. Salvio opens up Sexton's classroom, uncovering a teacher who willfully demonstrated that the personal could also be plural. Looking at how Sexton framed and used the personal in teaching and learning, Salvio considers the extent to which our histories-both personal and social-exert their influence on teaching. In doing so, she situates the teaching life of Anne Sexton at the center of some of the key problems and questions in feminist teaching: navigating the appropriate distance between teacher and student, the relationship between writer and poetic subject, and the relationship between emotional life and knowledge. Examining Sexton's pedagogy, with its "weird abundance" of tactics and strategies, Salvio argues that Sexton's use of the autobiographical "I" is as much a literary identity as a literal identity, one that can speak with great force to educators who recognize its vital role in the humanities classroom.

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Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. Loss, Love, and the Work of Learning: Lessons from the Teaching Life of Anne Sexton

2. Teacher of "Weird Abundance": A Portrait of the Pedagogical Tactics of Anne Sexton

3. Something Worth Learning: A Reading of the Student-Teacher Relationship Between Anne Sexton and John Holmes

4. "... [I] Bend Down My Strange Face to Yours, And Forgive You": A Study of Anne Sexton's Pedagogy of Reparation

5. Picturing the Racial Innocence of Anne Sexton's Pedagogy

Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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<p><b>The poet's life as a teacher.</b></p>

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780791470985
Publisert
2007-04-05
Utgiver
Vendor
State University of New York Press
Vekt
245 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
168

Forfatter
Foreword by

Biographical note

Paula M. Salvio is Associate Professor of Education at the University of New Hampshire and the coeditor (with Gail M. Boldt) of Love's Return: Psychoanalytic Essays on Childhood, Teaching, and Learning.