THE POETRY SUPERBOWL LINE-UP SHOW

In which football is bandied about as a theme and metaphor (of course) of what poetry is all about: football is a handy lens which gets us philosophical and full of insight; in such illumination, Emily Dickinson comes to light as wide receiver, Emerson as recruiting coach for The Poet (Hamlet is offensive coordinator for the players), and poets are scouted for their roles on the line.We hear the Bard hand off football, William Carlos Williams weigh in on the ball game, ideas for snacks (Neruda potatoes, Ferlingetti penny candy, Baudelaire wine, Eliot peach—I dare you!)—everything but the Clydesdale horse ads to pre-game, including poems on falcons and patriots (W.B. Yeats, Gerald Manley Hopkins) and history of why the Ravens (of past Superbowl fame) have that name. It's all about poetry, as we slow down, stop the clock as Cicero says, and gather round to see what's on the line in our own struggles and plights and fights and strength and losses in such orderly, rulesy, feats. The POETRY SLOW DOWNWith Professor Barbara MossbergProduced by Zappa Johns© Barbara MossbergFebruary 5, 2017Barbaramossberg.com

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BOOK ME: HOW GENIUS LOCI, A PASSION FOR PLACE, IS INVOKED BY POETRY AND CAN GET YOU INTO INTERESTING TROUBLE WITH THE LAW BUT IN A CIVIC HERO KIND OF WAY; POETRY AND THE CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE OF HELPING SAVE THE EARTH; AND A CELEBRATION OF WRITERS OF WATERSHED . . . NOW MORE THAN EVER

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HOW ABRAHAM LINCOLN'S READING OF POETRY LEADS TO NATIONAL PARK LEGISLATION, JOHN MUIR IN THE HOTSEAT OF CONGRESSIONAL TESTIMONY, AND IT'S ALL ABOUT A POEM ABOUT A MOUSE WHOM BOBBY BURNS (A FAV OF LINCOLN AND MUIR) CALLS A FELLOW MORTAL