Tyne Daile Sumner's engrossing, elegantly written book examines twentieth-century US American lyric poetry in the context of the rise of an increasingly invasive surveillance state. While focussing on the period 1920-1960, Sumner dips back into the nineteenth century, to poetic and political precursors like Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson and John Stuart Mill to ask how both lyric poetry and surveillance organisations have relied on and redefined concepts of subjectivity, privacy, national identity and even truthfulness. And she looks ahead to our own century, suggesting that lyric poetry may offer a mode of self-revelation more complex and less easily co-opted than those available in the on-line confession-and-surveillance industry. Eminently readable, this volume has much to offer not only to scholars of poetry, but to anyone interested in US American culture, history and politics. -Erin Carlston, Professor of English at the University of Auckland
Tyne Daile Sumner's Lyric Eye: The Poetics of Twentieth-Century Surveillance makes an incisive and persuasive contribution to our understanding of the complex contours of lyric poetry in twentieth-century American culture. Sumner extends recent reappraisals of the profoundly political nature of what might otherwise seem merely personal or confessional by identifying the specific ways in which structures and practices of state surveillance in mid-century America (including, but not only, the operation of the FBI and CIA) responded to, and inadvertently helped to shape, the mode. Sumner traces the emergence and perpetuation of a set of 'surveillant reading practices' and shows how these were applied to a range of poets from W.H. Auden through Nikki Giovanni, Langston Hughes and Robert Lowell to Anne Sexton and William Carlos Williams. In each case, the lyric 'I' was misunderstood-by an inchoate state apparatus-as primarily autobiographical, and thereby deemed suspect and actionable. Lyric Eye: The Poetics of Twentieth-Century Surveillance offers a sophisticated, informed and perspicacious reading of the complex choreography of scrutiny and evasion which, Sumner argues, characterised the operation of the lyric 'I' (and eye) during this period. She shows how the mobile and indeterminate 'I' of lyric poetry unsettled the functionaries of the state, prompting suspicion and close surveillance of a subject position which-of course -refused to be pinned down. In this way, lyric poetry of mid-century America both provoked and deflected scrutiny, finding in its own malleability and indeterminacy a strategy for avoiding misreading and, perhaps ironically, evidence of its own power. -Jo Gill, Professor of Twentieth-Century and American Literature at the University of Exeter