George Corso's Poetry Echos the Kennedy Assassination
By Nicole Beck, published Dec 05, 2005
Published Content: 57 Total Views: 179,212 Favorited By: 2 CPs
The ideas of civilization and progress were greatly challenged as a result of Kennedy’s death. Ironic that as a president Kennedy had spoken of progress, and yet his death seemed to be a regression to something uncivilized, something primitive. As David Frost said on the British TV show That was the Week that Was on November 23rd, “It was the least likely thing to happen in the whole world… we just didn’t believe in assassination anymore, not in the civilized world anyway” (qtd. in United Press International 66). The majority of Corso’s poem reflects this idea. He recounts ancient cultures and civilizations from the “Evolution of the Rocks” to “every King every Pope every puny/clubbed-foot Elect” (Corso 142). Corso travels the annals of history trying to create some worse crime than Kennedy’s assassination by “pee[ing] upon the Evolution of the Rocks,” by “pummel[ing] [his] Colt .38 into the iron skin of the Palaeolithic/muralist!” (141). And in the end, his “thousand years attempt at being/the Great Assassinator/ has failed” (143). The use of these earlier civilizations portrays the juxtapositions of past and present, savagery and civilization that many Americans felt.
You may also like...
- Bobby: A Re-telling of the Assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy
- The Assassination of JFK in a Literary Context
- Americans Take Lead as European Soccer Returns
- Rhode Island Congressman Patrick Kennedy is Lucky to Be Alive
- Patrick Kennedy Comes Clean
- Percentage of Americans Actively Trying to Lose Weight is Down
- Remembering the Native Americans of This Country
- A Trip to the US Embassy in Bangkok and a Talk with Unhappy Americans
- A New Term - Driving While Kennedy
- Congress Shows Native Americans Some Love
Takeaways
- Ideas of progress challenged by the assasination.
- A look to a 'simpler' past in response to the assasination.
- Can one man change the world?
Did You Know?
Kennedy's assisination forced the whole nation to reconsider its political and social climate.
Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Most Commented On

