![]() ![]() I want to continue, watching, charting, and discussing the counts, the recounts, the hand counts, but I cannot. Bush as the backdrop, Rankine writes: “I stop watching the news. ![]() In one section, with the controversial vote count over the reelection of George W. The book’s epigraph from Aime Cesaire is an admonition to not be a spectator: “And most of all beware, even in thought, of assuming the sterile attitude of the spectator,for life is not a spectacle, a sea of grief is not a proscenium, a man who wails is not a dancing bear…” In Rankine’s poem, the television is so much a symbol for the media, it’s simply the biggest source of bad news and despair. ![]() A repeated image of a static-filled television screen serves to separate the segments of the poem, signalling that Rankine is about to change the channel on us. It toggles between meditation and anger on a wide range of subjects, including death, cancer, depression (and anti-depressants), suicide, rape, 9/11, racism, history, politics, and literature, but the central trope is the ubiquitous television set. Paul: Graywolf, 2004) is a book-length prose poem filled with photographs and a few non-photographic images. Claudia Rankine’s Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric (St. ![]()
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