The Wounded Line: A Guide to Writing Poems of Trauma (Writing From Trauma Series)

$19.95
by Jehanne Dubrow

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A writing guide to processing trauma through the poetic form, Jehanne Dubrow, a well respected writer, speaker, guide, and spouse of a career military officer, offers an experienced and knowledgeable voice to aspiring writers and those working through trauma. In this accessible and inspiring guide, acclaimed writer Jehanne Dubrow draws on how the study of trauma has defined both her creative work and her teaching. The Wounded Line , the first craft-based writing book of its kind, is grounded not only in research but also in heart, in the belief that even our deepest hurts can find a lyric form. Leading poets through a series of practical approaches to representing pain on the page, Dubrow provides readers with narrative techniques, rhetorical structures, and formal strategies that can be applied to any trauma, from the global and the historical to the intimate and the personal. The Wounded Line encourages poets at all stages to address the difficult, discomfiting questions that ache within each of us. "A mas­ter­class on the inter­sec­tion of trau­ma and art and on how and why such poems touch us deeply, The Wound­ed Line will be cher­ished by any­one wish­ing to explore their own painful expe­ri­ences or those of the peo­ple who came before them." -- Diane Gottlieb ― Jewish Book Council “I love how this book guides without being imposing, how it opens the door without overwhelming, how it focuses on craft via love for craft. Here is a book that can be a friend, a book that you can take on the journey with you and then share with someone in your life who, too, will benefit from such a journey. It is the kind of text well worth sharing, for here craft and urgency of being come hand in hand. A terrific book.” -- Ilya Kaminsky, author of Deaf Republic: Poems "Deeply engaged in poetry, history, and trauma theory, The Wounded Line is for anyone who wants to understand that complex intersection of pain, memory, and art. Part meditation on the way trauma works in the mind (as nightmare, as inhibition, as creative force) and part resource for writers who would learn to transform individual and generational trauma into poetry, this book should be in every teacher’s and every poet’s library. Dubrow writes with clarity, sensitivity, and intelligence, shining a bright light across very difficult terrain." -- Kevin Prufer, author of The Fears Jehanne Dubrow is the author of ten poetry collections and three books of creative nonfiction, including Exhibitions: Essays on Art and Atrocity (UNM Press). She is a professor of creative writing and a Distinguished Research Professor at the University of North Texas.

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