Makes a case for innovation as the generative and thematic force in American poetry of the late 20th century. Syncopations is an analysis of the sustaining vitality behind contemporary American poetry from 1975 to the present day by one of the most astute observers and critics in the field. The 12 e
Reading the Difficulties : Dialogues with Contemporary American Innovative Poetry
β Scribed by Thomas Fink, Thomas Fink, Dr. Judith Halden-Sullivan Ph.D., Dr. Judith Halden-Sullivan Ph.D., Charles Bernstein, Carrie Conners, Kristen Gallagher, Paolo Javier, Burt Kimmelman, Hank Lazer, Jessica Lewis Luck, Stephen Paul Miller, Sheila E. Murphy, Elizabeth Robinson, Christopher Schmidt, Eileen R. Tabios
- Publisher
- University of Alabama Press
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 240
- Series
- Modern and contemporary poetics
- Edition
- 1st Edition
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Definitions of what constitutes innovative poetry are innumerable and are offered from every quarter. Some critics and poets argue that innovative poetry concerns free association (John Ashbery), others that experimental poetry is a βre-stagingβ of language (Bruce Andrews) or a syntactic and cognitive break with the past (Ron Silliman and Lyn Hejinian). The tenets of new poetry abound.
But what of the new reading that such poetry demands? Essays in Reading the Difficulties ask what kinds of stances allow readers to interact with verse that deliberately removes many of the comfortable cues to comprehensionβpoetry that is frequently nonnarrative, nonrepresentational, and indeterminate in subject, theme, or message.
Some essays in Thomas Fink and Judith Halden-Sullivanβs collection address issues of reader reception and the way specific stances toward reading support or complement the aesthetic of each poet. Others suggest how we can be open readers, how innovative poetic texts change the very nature of reader and reading, and how critical language can capture this metamorphosis. Some contributors consider how the reader changes innovative poetry, what language reveals about this interaction, which new reading strategies unfold for the audiences of innovative verse, and what questions readers should ask of innovative verse and of events and experiences that we might bring to reading it.
CONTRIBUTORS
Charles Bernstein / Carrie Conners / Thomas Fink /
Kristen Gallagher / Judith Halden-Sullivan / Paolo Javier /
Burt Kimmelman / Hank Lazer / Jessica Lewis Luck /
Stephen Paul Miller / Sheila E. Murphy / Elizabeth Robinson /
Christopher Schmidt / Eileen R. Tabios
β¦ Table of Contents
Content: Acknowledgments
Reading the Difficulties --
Thomas Fink and Judith Halden-Sullivan
Thank You for Saying Thank You --
Charles Bernstein
Reading and Reading --
Elizabeth Robinson
Of Course Poetry Is Difficult / Poetry Is Not Difficult --
Hank Lazer
Articulating a Radical and a Secular Jewish Poetics: Walter Benjamin, Charles Bernstein, and the Weak Messiah as Girly Man --
Stephen Paul Miller
Reading the Posthuman Subject in The Alphabet --
Burt Kimmelman
Cooking a Book with Low-Level Durational Energy
or, How to Read Tan Lin's Seven Controlled Vocabularies --
Kristen Gallagher. Engaging with (the Content of) John Bloomberg-Rissman's 2nd NOTICE OF MODIFICATIONS TO TEXT OF PROPOSED REGULATIONS --
Eileen R. TabiosBursting at the Seams: Exploding the Confines of Reification with Creative Constraints in Sleeping with the Dictionary --
Carrie Conners
The Game of Self-Forgetting: Reading Innovative Poetry Reading Gadamer --
Judith Halden-Sullivan
The Utopian Textures and Civic Commons of Lisa Robertson's Soft Architecture --
Christopher Schmidt
Problems of Context and the Will to Parsimony: Reading "Difficult" Recent U.S. Poetry --
Thomas Fink. Some Notes on bpNichol, (Captain) Poetry, and Comics --
Paolo JavierCrossing the Corpus Callosum: The Musical Phenomenology of Lisa Jarnot --
Jessica Lewis Luck
Extrapolatia --
Sheila E. Murphy
Works Cited
Contributors
Index.
β¦ Subjects
Poetics. Poetry -- Explication. Discourse analysis, Literary. American poetry -- History and criticism. American poetry. LITERARY CRITICISM -- Poetry.
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