Welcome to Deadhorse

Thesis (M.F.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005 Welcome to Deadhorse features poems that are narrative and lyrical in nature and represent an aesthetic in which the land is an undeniable force, generally inseparable from the lives of characters involved. The sequence of the poems creates a narr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Arnegard, Iver
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5982
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/5982 2023-05-15T13:14:31+02:00 Welcome to Deadhorse Arnegard, Iver 2005-05 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5982 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5982 Department of English Thesis mfa 2005 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:36:32Z Thesis (M.F.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005 Welcome to Deadhorse features poems that are narrative and lyrical in nature and represent an aesthetic in which the land is an undeniable force, generally inseparable from the lives of characters involved. The sequence of the poems creates a narrative arc that follows the journey of a man running from a broken-down Dakota farm. Lured by myths of the north, and haunted by ghosts, he travels to Alaska and finds that everything he hoped he'd left behind has come along with him: isolation, alcoholism, a traumatic past. The narrator eventually comes full-circle, returning to a home he never really left behind. I. LEAVING -- Homestead, collapsed -- Blizzard o the Rez -- The wind still sweeps -- She used to waitress at the Chuckwagon -- Family time -- Sunday drives -- Riding midnight -- A father's grave -- Leaving home -- II. LATITUDE 62 -- 70-Mile Bar, British Columbia -- These walks, five miles to town -- Visiting the neighbors -- Talkeetna drinkers, winter -- Reflection -- Degrees of Fahrenheit -- February -- Mother's Day at the Fairview -- Up here -- What whiskey steals -- On a trail outside Coldfoot -- The raging moose -- Salmon -- Stranded -- August up north -- Fairview Bar -- Forecast -- III. THE ROAD -- Welcome to Deadhorse -- A perfect love -- Blindness -- Aleut internment: forty years later the government offers a written apology --The story she tells -- First time seeing her back from the hospital -- A jail cell is the biggest place on earth -- Road crew -- Working holidays -- Kate in Sitka -- Hitching south -- Gathering bones -- Rock picking -- Farland cemetery, 2005 -- Whetstone Lutheran Church. Thesis aleut Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Fairbanks Fairview ENVELOPE(-118.386,-118.386,56.067,56.067) Homestead ENVELOPE(-119.369,-119.369,55.517,55.517)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
description Thesis (M.F.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005 Welcome to Deadhorse features poems that are narrative and lyrical in nature and represent an aesthetic in which the land is an undeniable force, generally inseparable from the lives of characters involved. The sequence of the poems creates a narrative arc that follows the journey of a man running from a broken-down Dakota farm. Lured by myths of the north, and haunted by ghosts, he travels to Alaska and finds that everything he hoped he'd left behind has come along with him: isolation, alcoholism, a traumatic past. The narrator eventually comes full-circle, returning to a home he never really left behind. I. LEAVING -- Homestead, collapsed -- Blizzard o the Rez -- The wind still sweeps -- She used to waitress at the Chuckwagon -- Family time -- Sunday drives -- Riding midnight -- A father's grave -- Leaving home -- II. LATITUDE 62 -- 70-Mile Bar, British Columbia -- These walks, five miles to town -- Visiting the neighbors -- Talkeetna drinkers, winter -- Reflection -- Degrees of Fahrenheit -- February -- Mother's Day at the Fairview -- Up here -- What whiskey steals -- On a trail outside Coldfoot -- The raging moose -- Salmon -- Stranded -- August up north -- Fairview Bar -- Forecast -- III. THE ROAD -- Welcome to Deadhorse -- A perfect love -- Blindness -- Aleut internment: forty years later the government offers a written apology --The story she tells -- First time seeing her back from the hospital -- A jail cell is the biggest place on earth -- Road crew -- Working holidays -- Kate in Sitka -- Hitching south -- Gathering bones -- Rock picking -- Farland cemetery, 2005 -- Whetstone Lutheran Church.
format Thesis
author Arnegard, Iver
spellingShingle Arnegard, Iver
Welcome to Deadhorse
author_facet Arnegard, Iver
author_sort Arnegard, Iver
title Welcome to Deadhorse
title_short Welcome to Deadhorse
title_full Welcome to Deadhorse
title_fullStr Welcome to Deadhorse
title_full_unstemmed Welcome to Deadhorse
title_sort welcome to deadhorse
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5982
long_lat ENVELOPE(-118.386,-118.386,56.067,56.067)
ENVELOPE(-119.369,-119.369,55.517,55.517)
geographic Fairbanks
Fairview
Homestead
geographic_facet Fairbanks
Fairview
Homestead
genre aleut
Alaska
genre_facet aleut
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5982
Department of English
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