What We Did While We Made More Guns (Pitt Poetry)

by Dorothy Barresi

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The poems in What We Did While We Made More Guns investigate the place where economic failure meets a widening acculturation of violence—a kind of Great Acceleration of soul extinction set in this spectacularly uneasy moment in American history. Cutting, comic, sorrowful, at times terrified, at times resolute, the poems tilt along the high cliff’s edge of identity anxiety and American moral uncertainty, where each of us plays our part in the business of dispossession or resistance. Building themselves out of jazzed-up verbal velocities and wounded (in)sincerity, the poems counsel resilience against all forms of battery, mortal, spiritual, financial. They are pattern-makers in the dark. They talk back to God. They take into themselves what cannot be taken back: the news that forty-six million Americans have “slipped” below the poverty line; that guns discharge monstrously banal virility; that a black woman pulled over for a routine traffic violation dies by strangulation in her jail cell; that we buy and sell the myth of the American Dream as though our lives depended on it.
  • ISBN10 0822965232
  • ISBN13 9780822965237
  • Publish Date 1 March 2018
  • Publish Status Active
  • Out of Print 8 November 2023
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint University of Pittsburgh Press
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 104
  • Language English