“Tremendous Homosexual Poems” | The New Yorker


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In 2024, Harvard College provided a course on Taylor Swift. It was standard, to say the least. That course was taught by a professor and literary critic named Stephanie Burt. In The New Yorker, Burt has written critically about comics and science fiction, however she’s additionally thought-about nice poets reminiscent of Seamus Heaney and Mary Oliver. Now Burt has put collectively an anthology, titled “Tremendous Homosexual Poems.” It’s a set of L.G.B.T.Q. poetry, whose contents start after the Stonewall rebellion, in 1969. When describing the gathering, Burt tells the New Yorker Radio Hour producer Jeffrey Masters, “ There are poems the place we learn it and we are saying, ‘Wow, that’s me.’ And there are poems the place we learn it and we are saying, ‘Wow, I didn’t know that may occur; that’s not me; that’s new to me; that’s completely different.’ And there are poems the place we learn them and we simply say, ‘That’s lovely. That’s elegant. That’s humorous. That’s attractive. That’s scorching. That’s so unhappy that I don’t know why I prefer it, however I do.’ And I like making these experiences out there to readers.”

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