"The status of ‘poetry after Auschwitz’ has been debated for more than seventy years, but Simone Stirner has found a fresh way of approaching the problem of post-traumatic representation and memory. With a focus on literary affect and its embodied impact on readers, Poetic Grief offers a stirring meditation on loss in the wake of the Shoah and in conversation with other histories of violence. Resisting the closures and containments that sanctioned forms of remembrance seek to install, Stirner reveals how poetry opens up grief—and how grief opens up poetry—in ways that are uncontainable but can enable difficult solidarities."---Michael Rothberg, author of The Implicated Subject: Beyond Victims and Perpetrators "Stirner provides an original, nuanced, and expansive analysis of poetry emerging in the prolonged aftermath of National Socialism. By examining poetic grief as a force that structures and de-structures, orients and disorients, she greatly advances our understanding of Holocaust and post-Holocaust poetry."---Katja Garloff, Reed College