The more radical poetries today are known by their admirers and
detractors alike for their extreme difficulty, a difficulty,
Marjorie Perloff argues, dependent less on the recondite imagery
and obscure allusion one associates with early modernism than on a
large-scale deconstruction of syntax and emphasis on morphology and
pun, paragram and paratext. She suggests this new "non-sensical"
poetry cannot be explained away as some sort of pernicious fad,
designed to fool the gullible and flatter the pretentious; it is,
on the contrary, an inevitable--and important--response to the
wholesale mediaization of postmodern culture in the United States.
But the conventional alienation model, the still-dominant myth of
the sensitive and isolated poet, confronted by the hostile mass
media, is no longer adequate. On the contrary, Perloff argues, we
must recognize that poetry today, like the visual arts and theater,
is always contaminated by media discourse; there is no escape into
some bucolic, purer realm. What this means is that poetry actively
engages the communication models of everyday discourse, producing
language constructions that foreground the artifice of the writing
process, the materiality of writing itself. How the negotiation
between poetic and media discourses takes place is the subject of
Marjorie Perloff's groundbreaking study. Radical Artifice considers
what happens when the "natural speech" model inherited from the
great modernist poets comes up against the "natural speech" of the
Donahue "talk show", or again, how visual poetics and verse forms
are responding to the discourse of billboards and sound bytes.
Among the many poets whose works are discussed are John Ashbery,
GeorgeOppen, Susan Howe, Clark Coolidge, Lyn Hejinian, Leslie
Scalapino, Charles Bernstein, Johanna Drucker, and Steve McCaffery.
But the strongest presence in Perloff's book is a "poet" better
known as a composer, a philosopher, a printmaker, a polymath, one
who understood, almost half a century ago, that from now on no
word, no musical note, no painted surface, no theoretical statement
could ever again escape "contamination" from the media landscape in
which we live. That poet is John Cage and it is under his sign that
Radical Artifice was composed.
General
Imprint: |
University of Chicago Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
June 1994 |
First published: |
June 1994 |
Authors: |
Marjorie Perloff
|
Dimensions: |
230 x 150 x 18mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
264 |
Edition: |
New edition |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-226-65734-9 |
Categories: |
Books
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-226-65734-5 |
Barcode: |
9780226657349 |
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