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  1. 5 de may. de 2017 · Prof. Elisa New sat down with hip hop legend Nas to do a close-reading at “It Ain’t Hard to Tell,” a track from his iconic 1994 album Illmatic. Watch the video to see Nas explain rhymes like “wisdom be leakin’ out my grapefruit, troop,” and to hear Professor New connect Nas’s verse to the tradition of American poetic form.

  2. 21 de ene. de 2022 · By Robert Israel. “Viewers are drawn into an active, immersive experience watching the series. They come away with the feeling that poetry is in them.”. Calling itself a “multi-platform education imitative,” Poetry in America is a series of half-hour public television broadcasts that explores the depth and breadth of poetry in the ...

  3. 9 de may. de 2020 · Poetry in America explores the diversity of American poetry. In each episode, members of various American communities join host Elisa New, following Gwendolyn Brooks to the South Side of Chicago ...

  4. 12 de feb. de 2019 · Elisa New is the Powell M. Cabot Professor of American Literature at Harvard University. She is the author of The Regenerate Lyric: Theology and Innovation in American Poetry ( 1992), The Line's Eye: Poetic Experience, American Sight (1999), and Jacob's Cane (2009) .

  5. www.poetryinamerica.org › episode › stepsSteps | Poetry in America

    Steps. A portal into 1950s New York City, Frank O’Hara’s “Lunch Poems” have the feel of playing hooky: of roaming from museums to Central Park and sneaking into cinemas. Choreographer Mark Morris, poets Terrance Hayes, Robert Pinsky, Todd Colby, and Eileen Myles, and musical duo Rachael and Vilray join host Elisa New to read “Steps ...

  6. Created by Elisa New, Poetry in America draws students of all ages into conversations about poetry. Poetry in America is a production of Verse Video Education, a not-for-profit organization founded by Elisa New that produces the highest quality educational media across disciplines. Menu .

  7. Created by Elisa New, Poetry in America draws students of all ages into conversations about poetry. <p>This free, not-for-credit HarvardX course begins with Puritan poets—some orthodox, some rebel spirits—who lived and wrote in early New England, and covers American poetry in cultural context through the year 1700.</p>