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This chapter discusses the Ottoman sphere in relationship to anti-Western, anti-materialist thought as it evolved in various locations throughout the nineteenth century. Unlike the eloquent and persuasive writings of authors such as Dostoevsky, Ottoman texts turning against the West are written in a vain of disappointment that the West did not keep its part of a bargain or failed to honor the Ottomans' achievements, rather than an intellectual challenge to modernity.
This chapter attempts a reparative telling of queer poetic history. It traces how the North American poetry has imagined, and has rendered imaginable, transformations of self and community. The chapter describes four topoi and representative poets that help illustrate poetry's subjunctive historicity: Queer Identification, Queer Influence, Queer Resistance, and Queer Horizons. Romantic outlawry stretches back to French nineteenth-century visionary Arthur Rimbaud, who influenced later queer verse like that of sex worker and thief Jean Genet. Such queer poetic resistance need not be reduced to romantic individualism, though. Indeed, Jean Genet's and Allen Ginsberg's work serves as reminders that social and juridico-legal institutions mandate sexual and gender outliers' marginalization. The dream, memory, and futurity di Prima writes about are the building blocks of poetry's subjunctive history. Instead of disclosing a particular truth or prescribing a course of action, poetry trains readers to see the world differently, queerly.
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