Introduction: Toward a Definition of 21st-Century North American Hybrid Poetry
[A]esthetic approaches that challenge a singular narrative/lyric voice and feature fragmentation, broken sequence, secondary material, and/or documentary modes … a collagist style, [a] breaking of generic conventions, and [a] focus on the materiality of language.(Julie Morrissy)
[Work that features] incongruities, contradictions, and moments of nonresolution.(Klaver)
[The use of] aesthetic and poetic registers to unsettle the colonial nation, identity, gender, and poetic form … [a concern with] questions of hybrid identity.(Heather Milne)
[A] dynamic temporal cybernetic system, a vessel, full of energy, simultaneously pulsing with the changing movements and constrictions of everyday life.(Tess Patalano)
[An] assemblage of images and text on the page.(Anastasia Nikolis)
- Multigenre: writing that involves the quotation, refashioning, or discussion of extant works (explored in essays by Elizabeth Coles, Michael Theune); that includes and alludes to different literary genres, including lyric poetry, autobiographical and more objective prose of different kinds (in essays by Amy Robbins, Nikolis), and critical theory, as well as more debased language.
- Multimedia: writing that integrates visual images, including digital ones, or musical scores or song lyrics (in Lynn Keller, Nikolis, Milne) in ways that at times emphasize “interruptions and, indeed, ‘disruption’” (Morrissey)
- Documentary: poems that evoke or take the form of news reports or that consider the function and effect of media depictions of recent events, including the ways these events “are reported, narrativised, … sensationalized[,] and depersonalized by the media” (Morrissey); poems that incorporate verbatim news reports, official documents, and other material (Keller, Jeannine Pitas); and poems that draw inspiration from nonpoetic, often activist modes of writing (Klaver)
- Palimpsestic (I borrow this term from Pitas): work that selectively cites and erases often canonical texts (Pitas, Milne).
- Identity-based: work that explores bifurcated or multiple identities, including Louise Glück’s embrace of simultaneous adoption of the position of mother and child (Reena Sastri) and several Undocupoets’ juxtapositions of material reality with an imaginary alternative to it (Daniel Enrique Pérez); the establishment of new hybrid identities such as Undocuqueer (Pérez) and “Indiqueer,” a fusion of indigenous and queer identities coined by poet Joshua Whitehead (Milne).
- An emphasis on slippage, assemblage, multiplicity, unlocatedness, and liminality. Imagery of movement recurs, including an emphasis on “the … mixture or melding of elements pulled apart and pushed back together” (Patalano) and a consideration of “those who cross or are crossed by borders” (Pérez). On a textual level, several authors explore a “slippage between [the positions of] analyst and assembler” (Nikolis) and an Anzaldúan aesthetic of uncertainty (Pérez).
- A reclamation of marginalization and the border broadly defined, along with a speaking back to stereotypes and a disclosure of formerly taboo or forbidden information. Texts discussed in the issue explore what Lisa Lowe has called “the histories of uneven and unsynthetic power relations” (qtd. in Klaver) via explorations of gender and reproductive freedom (Morrissy), the legacy of colonialism (Morrissey, Milne, Pérez), the treatment of migrants (Pitas, Pérez), and more.
- Challenges to national and linguistic boundaries. This tendency is partly evident in poems that adopt a “decolonial” (Milne) or “postnationalist” (Pérez) point of view, but it is also apparent in shifts within texts between locations and languages, sometimes leading to linguistically hybrid texts (including those in Spanglish), texts incorporating invented words (Patalano), and incomplete translations.
- Manipulations of temporality. Bernadette Mayer, according to Robbins, “develop[s] experiences of subjective time as moments of resistance to the standardizing force of objective clock and calendric time” and replacing a physically located, “personal I” with one “thoroughly mediated by standard … as well as geological time”. Other essays consider conditions of “simultaneity” (Klaver), repetition (Nikolis, Patalano), and related disruptions of normative chronology.
- An emphasis on materiality. The essays consider “material objects” and “material constraints” (Nikolis), “material reality” (Galvin, qtd. in Morrissey), “material intertwining” (Keller), and a “poetics of material interruption,” which Morrissey defines as the use of distinctively poetic strategies to disrupt material conditions. In fact, the poets discussed often redefine the process of poetic composition, partly by situating the writer as reader (Coles) or compiler (Nikolis) as well as creator. By emphasizing performance and performativity, these poems also move beyond the printed page to gallery, theatrical, and virtual spaces in ways that help create the communities for which they advocate.
- Redefinitions of traditional poetic (especially lyric) conventions and subgenres. From Glück’s embrace of a dual identity in her poems (Sastri) to more radically “polyphonous text[s]” with multiple speakers (Pitas), the poets in this issue interrogate singular, stable lyric speakers (the traditional lyric “I”) as a response to contemporary forces ranging from environmental crisis (Keller) to the political instability associated with living in the Anthropocene (Robbins). These poems also tend to adopt what Coles calls “a variant second person” that enables at-times overlaid acts of reading and rereading, as well as a shifting between apostrophe (address to a singular absent entity) and reader address. Nikolis considers hybrid elegies that employ both written text and visual images as responses to traditional poems in this lyric subgenre. Theune considers Jorie Graham’s hybrid exploration of the constitutively lyric notion of the turn.
Conflicts of Interest
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Keniston, A. Introduction: Toward a Definition of 21st-Century North American Hybrid Poetry. Humanities 2025, 14, 232. https://doi.org/10.3390/h14120232
Keniston A. Introduction: Toward a Definition of 21st-Century North American Hybrid Poetry. Humanities. 2025; 14(12):232. https://doi.org/10.3390/h14120232
Chicago/Turabian StyleKeniston, Ann. 2025. "Introduction: Toward a Definition of 21st-Century North American Hybrid Poetry" Humanities 14, no. 12: 232. https://doi.org/10.3390/h14120232
APA StyleKeniston, A. (2025). Introduction: Toward a Definition of 21st-Century North American Hybrid Poetry. Humanities, 14(12), 232. https://doi.org/10.3390/h14120232