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Communication

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As originally published in

The Atlantic Monthly

May 1991

Can Poetry Matter?

Poetry has vanished as a cultural force in America.

If poets venture outside their confined world, they can

work

to make it essential once more

by Dana Gioia

AMERICAN POETRY now belongs to a subculture. No

longer part of the mainstream of artistic and intellectual

life, it has become the specialized occupation of a

relatively small and isolated group. Little of the frenetic

activity it generates ever reaches outside that closed group.

As a class poets are not without cultural status. Like priests

in a town of agnostics, they still command a certain

residual prestige. But as individual artists they are almost

invisible.

What makes the situation of contemporary poets

particularly surprising is that it comes at a moment of

unprecedented expansion for the art. There have never

before been so many new books of poetry published, so

many anthologies or literary magazines. Never has it been

so easy to earn a living as a poet. There are now several

thousand college-level jobs in teaching creative writing,

and many more at the primary and secondary levels.

Congress has even instituted the position of poet laureate,

as have twenty-five states. One also finds a complex

network of public subvention for poets, funded by federal,

state, and local agencies, augmented by private support in

the form of foundation fellowships, prizes, and subsidized

retreats. There has also never before been so much

published criticism about contemporary poetry; it fills

dozens of literary newsletters and scholarly journals.

Page 1 of Can Poetry Matter? - 91.05 23

http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/poetry/gioia/gioia.htm 11/10/2003

 Return to The

Matter of Poetry: An

introduction to The

Atlantic's Poetry Pages

 See "Hearing From

Poetry's

Audience" (1992),

Dana Gioia's follow up

to this article.

 Return to Poetry

Pages

The proliferation of new poetry and poetry programs is

astounding by any historical measure. Just under a

thousand new collections of verse are published each year,

in addition to a myriad of new poems printed in magazines

both small and large. No one knows how many poetry

readings take place each year, but surely the total must run

into the tens of thousands. And there are now about 200

graduate creative-writing programs in the United States,

and more than a thousand undergraduate ones. With an

average of ten poetry students in each graduate section,

these programs alone will produce about 20,000 accredited

professional poets over the next decade. From such

statistics an observer might easily conclude that we live in

the golden age of American poetry.

But the poetry boom has been a

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