The Age of Huts (compleat)

The Age of Huts (compleat)
Author: Ron Silliman
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 328
Release: 2007-04-09
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780520940420

Between the Age of Innocence and the Age of Experience comes The Age of Huts. This book brings together for the first time all of the poems in Ron Silliman's Age of Huts cycle, including Ketjak, Sunset Debris, The Chinese Notebook, and 2197, as well as two key satellite texts, Sitting Up, Standing, Taking Steps, and BART. Each poem offers a radically different approach toward using language to explore the world. One of the founding works of Language Poetry, The Age of Huts is about everything, more or less literally, as each sentence, even each phrase, embarks on its own narrative, linking together to form a large polyphonic investigation of contemporary life. From Ketjak, one of the first poems to employ "the new sentence," to 2197, a serial work that scrambles the vocabulary and grammar of its sentences, The Age of Huts questions everything we have known about poetry in order to see the world anew.

The Age of Huts (compleat)

The Age of Huts (compleat)
Author: Ron Silliman
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 325
Release: 2007-04-09
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0520250168

Publisher description

The Low Passions: Poems

The Low Passions: Poems
Author: Anders Carlson-Wee
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages: 98
Release: 2019-03-12
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0393652394

In a “trenchantly observed and moving debut” (John James, Kenyon Review), Anders Carlson-Wee mines nourishment and holiness from the darkest of our human origins. Explosive and incantatory, The Low Passions traces the fringes of the American experiment through the eyes of a young drifter. Pathologically frugal, reckless, and vulnerable, the narrator of these viscerally compelling poems hops freight trains, hitchhikes, dumpster dives, and sleeps in the homes of total strangers, scavenging forgotten and hardscrabble places for tangible forms of faith.

Ours

Ours
Author: Cole Swensen
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 113
Release: 2008-04-08
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0520254643

"A remarkably adept, even facile craftsperson--I know of no poet who makes the most stunning verbal effects on the page look more effortless. Her critical assumptions, literary strategies and approach to the text clearly place her among the finest post-avant poets we now have."—Ron Silliman, author of The Age of Huts (compleat)

Writing in Real Time

Writing in Real Time
Author: Paul Jaussen
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2017-07-03
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1108170986

From Walt Whitman to the contemporary period, the long poem has been one of the more dynamic, intricate, and yet challenging literary practices of modernity. Addressing those challenges, Writing in Real Time combines systems theory, literary history, and recent debates in poetics to interpret a broad range of American long poems as emergent systems, capable of adaptation and transformation in response to environmental change. Due to these emergent properties, the long poem performs essential cultural work, offering a unique experience of history that remains valuable for our rapidly transforming digital age. Moving across a broad range of literary and theoretical texts, Writing in Real Time demonstrates that the study of emergence can enhance literary scholarship, just as literature provides unique insights into emergent properties, making this book a key resource for scholars, graduate students, and undergraduate students alike.

Red Lemons

Red Lemons
Author: Sean Shearer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 65
Release: 2021-03-21
Genre:
ISBN: 9781629221953

Red Lemons is a moving debut collection about drug addiction and loss told through both a narrative and surreal lens, swaying from logic to absurdity, grimness to beauty. In these poems there is a "war with self" tethered to both the narrative and lyric, often playing with scope and leaps that fall between the threshold of order and chaos--a style of gentle reserve and wild transparency--Red Lemons is poised with brutal imagination, where nightmares "wait beyond the night / in a pitch we cannot hear, / like a still pond and all its eaten."

Counterfeit Culture

Counterfeit Culture
Author: Rob Turner
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2019-06-20
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1108428487

Explores the possibility of writing epic in an age of alternative facts.

Experimentalism as Reciprocal Communication in Contemporary American Poetry

Experimentalism as Reciprocal Communication in Contemporary American Poetry
Author: Elina Siltanen
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2016-10-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9027266395

The poems of John Ashbery, Lyn Hejinian and Ron Silliman may seem to offer endless small details of expression, observation, thought and narrative which fail to hang together even from one line to the next. But as Elina Siltanen shows here, this extraordinary flow of uncoordinated detail can stimulate readers to join the poets in a delightful exploration of ordinary language. When readers take a poem in this spirit, they actually begin to read as members of a community: the community not only of themselves and other readers, but also including the poet and other poets, plus all the speakers of the language in which the poem is written. For all these different parties, that language is indeed a shared resource, and the way for readers to get started is simply by recalling or imagining some of the numerous kinds of context in which the given poem’s words-phrases-sentences could, or could not, be successfully used. The rewards for such proactive readers are on the one hand a heightened sense of the subtle interweavings of language and life, and on the other hand a freshly empowered self-confidence. The point being that, within the community of contemporary experimental poetry, poets have no more authority than readers. Rejecting older cultural hierarchies, they present themselves as teasing out the idiomatic serendipities of their own poems together with their readers.

How Literary Worlds Are Shaped

How Literary Worlds Are Shaped
Author: Bo Pettersson
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2016-09-12
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3110484935

Literary studies still lack an extensive comparative analysis of different kinds of literature, including ancient and non-Western. How Literary Worlds Are Shaped. A Comparative Poetics of Literary Imagination aims to provide such a study. Literature, it claims, is based on individual and shared human imagination, which creates literary worlds that blend the real and the fantastic, mimesis and genre, often modulated by different kinds of unreliability. The main building blocks of literary worlds are their oral, visual and written modes and three themes: challenge, perception and relation. They are blended and inflected in different ways by combinations of narratives and figures, indirection, thwarted aspirations, meta-usages, hypothetical action as well as hierarchies and blends of genres and text types. Moreover, literary worlds are not only constructed by humans but also shape their lives and reinforce their sense of wonder. Finally, ten reasons are given in order to show how this comparative view can be of use in literary studies. In sum, How Literary Worlds Are Shaped is the first study to present a wide-ranging and detailed comparative account of the makings of literary worlds.

Pop Poetics

Pop Poetics
Author: Andy Fitch
Publisher: Deep Vellum Publishing
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2012-08-07
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1564787664

Adopting artist-poet Joe Brainard as its principal focus, this project presents "Pop poetics" not as a minor, coterie movement meriting a sympathetic footnote in accounts of the postwar era's literary history, but as a missing link that confounds and potentially unites any number of supposedly rigid critical distinctions (authenticity versus formalism, the "personal" versus the mechanical). Pop poetics matter, argues Andrew Fitch, not just to the occasional aficionado of Brainard's I Remember, but to anybody concerned with reconstructing the dynamic aesthetic exchange between postwar art and poetry.