

Poetry In America
Season 4
Scholar and host Elisa New travels the country, joining up with distinguished poets, celebrities, and everyday Americans to create a fully immersive experience in hearing, reading, and interpreting American poems.
Where to Watch Poetry In America • Season 4
8 Episodes
- Phillis Wheatley: To the University
E1Phillis Wheatley: To the UniversityIn 1770s Boston, Phillis Wheatley was at the same time enslaved and an international celebrity: a writer who mastered the most persuasive rhetoric of the day to publish enduring arguments about freedom. Inaugural poets Amanda Gorman and Richard Blanco, writer Clint Smith, and scholars Glenda Carpio and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. join host Elisa New to read two of Wheatley's poems for public occasions. - Six Years Later, Epitaph for a Centaur
E2Six Years Later, Epitaph for a CentaurRussian-born poet Joseph Brodsky wrote about the centaur as a Cold War self-portrait: a divided global refugee, created by a geopolitics of shifting borders and cultures. Theater of War artistic director Bryan Doerries, writer Yelena Akhtiorskaya, and scholars Sven Birkerts, Zakhar Ishtov, Jonathan Brent, and Joseph Ellis read two poems by Brodsky: one about love; the other, exile. - Mushrooms, Weakness and Doubt
E3Mushrooms, Weakness and DoubtPoems by Sylvia Plath and Kay Ryan take the peripheral status of the fungal kingdom as an invitation to consider the scientific knowns and unknowns, and cultural significance, of mushrooms. Microbial ecologist Serita Frey, Chef Gabrielle Hamilton, Plant pathologist Barry Pryor, Health advocate Dr. Andrew Weil, Writers Maria Popova and Maria Pinto, and Journalist Frank Bruni join host Elisa New. Poems by Sylvia Plath and Kay Ryan take the peripheral status of the fungal kingdom as an invitation to consider the scientific knowns and unknowns, and cultural significance, of mushrooms. Microbial ecologist Serita Frey, Chef Gabrielle Hamilton, Plant pathologist Barry Pryor, Health advocate Dr. Andrew Weil, Writers Maria Popova and Maria Pinto, and Journalist Frank Bruni join host Elisa New. - July in WashingtonE4
July in WashingtonAgainst the backdrop of 1964 Washington D.C., Robert Lowell wrote this timeless reflection on the contradictions between American idealism and American policy. Journalists Andrea Mitchell and Justin Worland, political commentators David Axelrod and Bill Kristol, scholar Sir Jonathan Bate, and psychologist Kay Redfield Jamison join host Elisa New. - Hill Country
E5Hill CountryGod drives down from the mountains behind the wheel of a Jeep, in this poem by Tracy K. Smith, former U.S. poet laureate. Smith illuminates the ambrosial bounty of Texas Hill Country, where she's joined by country music singer-songwriter Jimmie Dale Gilmore, members of both Christian and Jewish communities, and host Elisa New. - The Emperor of Ice-Cream, Motive for MetaphorE6
The Emperor of Ice-Cream, Motive for MetaphorModernist poet Wallace Stevens balanced his long career as an insurance executive with a thrilling life of the imagination. Actor Murray Bartlett, ice cream maker Gus Rancatore, cognitive scientist Laurie Santos, scholar Al Filreis, poet David Baker, former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Bob Rubin, and the 2021 National Student Poets join Elisa New. - Who Burns for the Perfection of Paper
E7Who Burns for the Perfection of PaperLong before he won the National Book Award, Latinx poet Martín Espada worked after school in a factory making legal pads. Espada, Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, economists Natasha Sarin, Betsey Stevenson, and Justin Wolfers, historian Jill Lepore, and actor John Turturro join Elisa New to reflect on social mobility, and what connects manual labor with the raw materials of poetry and law. - Steps
E8StepsA portal into 1950s New York City, Frank O'Hara's "Lunch Poems" have the feel of playing hooky: of roaming from museums to Central Park and sneaking into cinemas. Choreographer Mark Morris, poets Terrance Hayes, Robert Pinsky, Todd Colby, and Eileen Myles, and musical duo Rachael and Vilray join host Elisa New to read "Steps," O'Hara's ode to NYC art and dance.