For decades, there has been a deep rift between poetry and fiction in the United States, especially in academic settings; graduate writing programs in universities, for example, train students as poets or as writers of fiction, but almost never as both. Both poets and writers of fiction have tended to support this of thought or feeling, whereas character and narrative events are the stock-in-trade of fiction.
Certainly it is true that poetry and fiction are distinct genres, but why have specialized education and literary territoriality resulted from this distinction? The answer lies perhaps in a widespread attitude in U.S. culture, which often casts a suspicious eye on the generalist. Those with knowledge and expertise in multiple one field is diluted or compromised by accomplishment in another.
Fortunately, there are signs that the bias against writers who cross generic boundaries is diminishing; several recent writers are known and respected for their work in both genres. One important example of this trend is Rita Dove, an African American writer highly acclaimed for both her poetry and her fiction. A few observes, “Poets write plays, novelists compose libretti, playwrights write novels— they would not understand our restrictiveness.”
It makes little sense, Dove believes, to persist in the restrictive approach to poetry and fiction prevalent in the U.S., because each genre shares in the nature of the other. Indeed, her poetry offers example after example of what can only be properly regarded as lyric narrative. Her use of language in only by writing in both genres, but also by fusing the two genres within individual works.
What this question is testing
Topic
The author is talking about a wall in U.S. literature: poets do one thing, fiction writers do another, and they don't mix. Then they bring in Rita Dove as a writer who simply ignores the wall.
Framework
Highlight Noteworthy. The author isn't fighting an opponent — they're flagging a problem and pointing to someone who shows the problem is unnecessary.
Main Point
Here's the simpler version: in the U.S., poets and fiction writers stay in their lanes, and writing programs reinforce that. The author thinks this comes from a broader American attitude that doesn't trust people who do more than one thing well. But the wall is starting to come down — and Rita Dove is the headline example, both because she works in both genres and because she fuses them inside individual works.
P1: The rift
Most of paragraph 1 sets the scene: poetry and fiction are taught and practiced as separate worlds. The reasoning has been that poetry is for inner experience and fiction is for plot and character.
P2: Why the rift exists
The author asks why a real distinction between two genres turned into territorial separation, and answers: U.S. culture distrusts the generalist. If you do two things, people assume you're diluting both.
P3: The bias is fading; meet Dove
"Fortunately" is the giveaway: the author is glad the bias is shrinking. Several writers are now respected across the divide. Dove is the lead example — she grew up loving both genres and points out that German writers move freely between genres without the same suspicion.
Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.