What Are Poets For?

What Are Poets For?
Author: Gerald L Bruns
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Total Pages: 247
Release: 2012-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1609380800

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Conceptions and practices of poetry change not only from time to time and from place to place but also from poet to poet. This has never been more the case than in recent years. Gerald Bruns’s magisterial What Are Poets For? explores typographical experiments that distribute letters randomly across a printed page, sound tracks made of vocal and buccal noises, and holographic poems that recompose themselves as one travels through their digital space. Bruns surveys one-word poems, found texts, and book-length assemblies of disconnected phrases; he even includes descriptions of poems that no one could possibly write, but which are no less interesting (or no less poetic) for all of that. The purpose of the book is to illuminate this strange poetic landscape, spotlighting and describing such oddities as they appear, anomalies that most contemporary poetry criticism ignores. Naturally this breadth raises numerous philosophical questions that Bruns also addresses—for example, whether poetry should be responsible (semantically, ethically, politically) to anything outside itself, whether it can be reduced to categories, distinctions, and the rule of identity, and whether a particular poem can seem odd or strange when everything is an anomaly. Perhaps our task is simply to learn, like anthropologists, how to inhabit such an anarchic world. The poets taken up for study are among the most important and innovative in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries: John Ashbery, Charles Bernstein, Paul Celan, Kenneth Goldsmith, Lyn Hejinian, Susan Howe, Karen Mac Cormack, Steve McCaffery, John Matthias, J. H. Prynne, and Tom Raworth.What Are Poets For? is nothing less than a lucid, detailed study of some of the most intractable writings in contemporary poetry.


What Are Poets For?
Language: en
Pages: 247
Authors: Gerald L Bruns
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2012-06 - Publisher: University of Iowa Press

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Conceptions and practices of poetry change not only from time to time and from place to place but also from poet to poet. This has never been more the case than
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Language: en
Pages: 256
Authors: Willard Spiegelman
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2005-06-23 - Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Pages: 177
Authors: Matthew Zapruder
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2017-08-15 - Publisher: HarperCollins

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An impassioned call for a return to reading poetry and an incisive argument for poetry’s accessibility to all readers, by critically acclaimed poet Matthew Za
When My Brother Was an Aztec
Language: en
Pages: 119
Authors: Natalie Diaz
Categories: Poetry
Type: BOOK - Published: 2012-12-04 - Publisher: Copper Canyon Press

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Language: en
Pages: 290
Authors: Gilbert Highet
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2010-03-16 - Publisher: New York Review of Books

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Gilbert Highet was a legendary teacher at Columbia University, admired both for his scholarship and his charisma as a lecturer. Poets in a Landscape is his deli