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Poetry for historians
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13 April 2018

HISTORY / Historiography, History: theory and methods, LITERARY CRITICISM / Poetry, Historiography, Literary studies: poetry and poets
‘[This book] will be a must-read as much for literary critics of W. H. Auden as historians of the twentieth century, for eighteenth centuryists of any discipline, and for anyone who wants to think about what constitutes history writing, or, indeed, to think about the journey of the Left over the past few decades and where it might end up.’
Jon Mee, Professor of Eighteenth-century Studies, University of York
‘Witty, acute, eloquent, ruthlessly confessional and riveting, Poetry for historians refuses to leave poetry to poets. It also proves Steedman to be the poet of history par excellence.’
Roger Cooter, Emeritus Professor of History, UCL
‘It's very hard to think of other historians who move so creatively in quite the same way across various kinds of borders, where the latter are not so much the boundaries between academic disciplines as the differences between familiar and more imaginative forms of knowledge and thought. With an exceptional eye for the unexpected insights and meanings, Carolyn Steedman roams brilliantly among a wide variety of genres and practices of writing and public performance, while pushing carefully on how we can understand them.’
Geoff Eley, Karl Pohrt Distinguished University Professor of Contemporary History, University of Michigan
'Steedman's reflection on W. H. Auden's use of the idea of Clio in his poetry is wonderful, a love letter to poetry and historiography, and to the intersections of the two, as well as a passionate personal explanation of what is social history. [...] It is a book I enjoyed enormously.'
Christopher Fauske, Anglican and Episcopal History
Introduction
PART I: History
1 Servant poets: an ode on a dishclout
2 W. H. Auden and the servants
3 The uses of Clio
4 An education
5 W. H. Auden and me
6 Caesura: a worker reads history and a historian writes poetry
PART II: Historiography
7 Makers of history
8 Homage to Clio
9 The ridiculous historian’s hopes
Conclusion
Index