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Appetite: Food as Metaphor: An Anthology of Women Poets (Boa Anthology Series, No. 1)

por Phyllis Stowell

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In poems from as varied women poets as Jane Kenyon, Lucille Clifton, and Anne Sexton, food emerges as a re-occurring and central metaphor in the way women live, in the pulse of the everyday, and as a vehicle for the exotic. From coffee to caviar, from potatoes to dandelions--even in hunger and anorexia--the metaphors of food have worked like yeast in the imagination of these poets. Preface by Chef Charlotte Turgeon. Phyllis Stowellinitiated the Saint Mary's College of California MFA program. She is a former Fellow of the Camargo Foundation and was a Dewitt Wallace/Reader's Digest Fellow at the MacDowell Colony. She was granted a Barbara Deming Money for Women Award and was a winner of the International Quarterly Crossing Boundaries Poetry Prize. Her publications includeAssent to Solitude, Who Is Alice?, andSequence and Consequence, an Alchemical Journal. She publishes poetry, criticism, and poetry reviews. Jeanne Fosteris a Professor in the Graduate Liberal Studies program at Saint Mary's College of California. Her critical book, A Music of Grace, explores the vision of the sacred in contemporary American poetry, and her poetry collection,A Blessing of Safe Travel, won the Quarterly Review of Literature Award in Poetry. Her poems have appeared inTriquarterly, Hudson Review, North American Review, Ploughshares, and other journals.… (más)
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In poems from as varied women poets as Jane Kenyon, Lucille Clifton, and Anne Sexton, food emerges as a re-occurring and central metaphor in the way women live, in the pulse of the everyday, and as a vehicle for the exotic. From coffee to caviar, from potatoes to dandelions--even in hunger and anorexia--the metaphors of food have worked like yeast in the imagination of these poets. Preface by Chef Charlotte Turgeon. Phyllis Stowellinitiated the Saint Mary's College of California MFA program. She is a former Fellow of the Camargo Foundation and was a Dewitt Wallace/Reader's Digest Fellow at the MacDowell Colony. She was granted a Barbara Deming Money for Women Award and was a winner of the International Quarterly Crossing Boundaries Poetry Prize. Her publications includeAssent to Solitude, Who Is Alice?, andSequence and Consequence, an Alchemical Journal. She publishes poetry, criticism, and poetry reviews. Jeanne Fosteris a Professor in the Graduate Liberal Studies program at Saint Mary's College of California. Her critical book, A Music of Grace, explores the vision of the sacred in contemporary American poetry, and her poetry collection,A Blessing of Safe Travel, won the Quarterly Review of Literature Award in Poetry. Her poems have appeared inTriquarterly, Hudson Review, North American Review, Ploughshares, and other journals.

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