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American Poetry as Transactional Art (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,294
Discovery Miles 12 940
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American Poetry as Transactional Art (Paperback)
Series: Modern & Contemporary Poetics
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Explores the ways American poetry engages with visual art, music,
fiction, spirituality, and performance art. Many people think of
poetry as a hermetic art, as though poets wrote only about
themselves or as if the subject of poetry were finally only poetry
- its forms and traditions. Indeed much of what constitutes poetry
in the lyric tradition depends on a stringently controlled point of
view and aims for a timeless, intransitive utterance. Stephen
Fredman's study proposes a different perspective. American Poetry
as Transactional Art explores a salient quality of much avant-garde
American poetry that has so far lacked sustained treatment: namely,
its role as a transactional art. Specifically Fredman describes
this role as the ways it consistently engages in conversation,
talk, correspondence, going beyond the scope of its own subjects
and forms - its existential interactions with the outside world.
Poetry operating in this vein draws together images, ideas,
practices, rituals, and verbal techniques from around the globe,
and across time - not to equate them, but to establish dialogue, to
invite as many guests as possible to the World Party, which Robert
Duncan has called the 'symposium of the whole.' Fredman invites new
readers into contemporary poetry by providing lucid and nuanced
analyses of specific poems and specific interchanges between poets
and their surroundings. He explores such topics as poetry's
transactions with spiritual traditions and practices over the
course of the twentieth century; the impact of World War II on the
poetry of Charles Olson and George Oppen; exchanges between poetry
and other art forms including sculpture, performance art, and
ambient music; the battle between poetry and prose in the early
work of Paul Auster and in Lyn Hejinian's My Life. The epilogue
looks briefly at another crucial transactional occasion: teaching
American poetry in the classroom in a way that demonstrates that it
is at the center of the arts and at the heart of American culture.
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