|
Showing 1 - 25 of
44 matches in All Departments
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Swimming at Midnight collects the short and middle-length poems
from John Matthias's earlier books together with twenty poems that
have previously appeared only in magazines. It is published
simultaneously with Beltane at Aphelion, which includes all of
Matthias's longer poems. The two books together represent some
thirty years of his work. The poems in Swimming at Midnight range
from early lyrics written in American during the late 1960s to
meditative poems dealing with historical, geographical and cultural
themes deriving from Matthias's years in England in the seventies
and eighties; they include the epistolary poems from Turns, "Poem
for Cynouai" from Crossing, "A Wind in Roussillon" from Northern
Summer, and the formal experiments engaging issues of poetics and
metaphysics for which Matthias is well known. The book concludes
with a section of new poems and translations dealing both with the
public world of modern history and the private experience of life
in the century's final decade. The last poem of all connects the
work in Swimming at Midnight with the last of the long poems in
Beltane at Aphelion. Critics have been warm in their praise of
Matthias's work. Robert Duncan called his early poetry "the work of
a Goliard-one of those wandering souls out of a Dark Age in our own
time," and Guy Davenport has said that his recent work makes him
"one of the leading poets in the USA." D. M. Thomas in the TLS
admired the "virtuosity" of Turns and the way "life presses into
the poems," while John Fuller in the same journal found the poems
in Crossing "bursting with a masterful intelligence." In a long
essay on Northern Summer, Jeremy Hooker wrote: "In his combination
of lyrical and discursive voices, as in subject and concern,
Matthias has an exciting range...He writes in some poems from a
tension between a scribe's respect for the integrity of his
materials and a magician's freedom to transform them, and in many
poems he brings together the contrasting gifts and is fully present
as himself, both scribe and magician."
A Gathering of Ways is John Matthias' first collection of poems
since the publication of his warmly received Northern Summer
collection in 1985. The book consists of three long poems dealing
with the geography, geology, prehistory, and history of two places
closely identified with Matthias' work, the East Anglian region of
Britain and the American Midwest, and a third place that provides
the book with a new and deeply resonant setting: those parts of
southern France and northern Spain through which run the famous
pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela. \u201cAn East Anglian
Diptych\u201d explores those parts of Cambridgeshire, Suffolk, and
Norfolk linked by three rivers and by those ancient paths and
tracks known as ley lines which connect locality and locality and
time with time. \u201cFacts From an Apocryphal Midwest\u201d
explores another group of trails that began as prehistoric paths
down which copper from Lake Superior was carried from the early
days of the mound-builders. Despite the historical backdrop of
these poems, both bring the reader into the present in unexpected
ways, preparing him or her for the strange and visionary \u201cA
Compostela Diptych,\u201d winner of the Poetry Society of America's
George Bogin Memorial Award.
Sound art has long been resistant to its own definition. Emerging
from a liminal space between movements of thought and practice in
the twentieth century, sound art has often been described in terms
of the things that it is understood to have left behind: a space
between music, fine art, and performance. The Oxford Handbook of
Sound Art surveys the practices, politics, and emerging frameworks
of thought that now define this previously amorphous area of study.
Throughout the Handbook, artists and thinkers explore the uses of
sound in contemporary arts practice. Imbued with global
perspectives, chapters are organized in six overarching themes of
Space, Time, Things, Fabric, Senses and Relationality. Each theme
represents a key area of development in the visual arts and music
during the second half of the twentieth century from which sound
art emerged. By offering a set of thematic frameworks through which
to understand these themes, this Handbook situates constellations
of disparate thought and practice into recognized centers of
activity.
Acoustic shadows – sound suppressed in such a way that even
General Grant was deceived by one at the Battle of Iuka in the
American Civil War – complicate the lives of many figures
appearing in these poems, including that of the young John Matthias
at his grandfather’s house on Iuka Drive in Columbus, Ohio in the
1950s. This book, Matthias’s first volume of entirely new poems
since Complayntes for Doctor Neuro (Shearsman, 2016), includes a
group of short lyrics followed by an essay called “Some Zones”
(about places in which a kind of imaginative clarity becomes
possible) and two longish sequences, “Prynne and a Petoskey
Stone” and “First and Last Opinions,” dealing with the
American Midwest from the perspective of an English poet’s
Cambridge, and the Ohio Supreme Court opinions written by
Matthias’s father and grandfather. The title poem concludes the
volume by bringing together memories and documents relating to the
poet’s great-grandfather, especially those pertaining to Civil
War battles in which he fought alongside the famous and mysterious
Ambrose Bierce, author of The Devil’s Dictionary, who disappeared
in Mexico in 1913.
Complayntes for Dr. Neuro is John Matthias's first volume of poetry
since Shearsman's publication of his three volumes of collected
poems in 2011, 2012, and 2013. The present book, ending with the
title sequence about being forced to confront some of the very
neurological problems in fact which have in many earlier poems been
something of a theoretical pre-occupation, also represents the more
experimental side of his work that has tended to preoccupy the
critics who have written on him over the past three decades, along
with translation-based work (Virgil, the Chinese Shijing, Rimbaud),
a run of austere shorter poems, many of an elegiac cast, and some
graffiti-like riffs. Matthias has always written in several styles,
and those are once again on display in this volume. The notes
include an important gloss on the title poem, 'A Poetics of
Parkinson's.'
At Large takes its title from John Matthias' "Editor at Large"
column published during the last decade in Notre Dame Review. The
book is in some ways a sequel to his previous volume of essays and
memoirs, Who Was Cousin Alice? And Other Questions (Shearsman
Books, 2011). Like that book, At Large contains a series of
personal essays, many of which also involve literary commentary,
along with literary essays that retain the flavor of memoir.
Subjects include memories of an early poetic apprenticeship, family
history, backgrounds for his novel Different Kinds of Music
(Shearsman, 2014), as well as longer and more formal pieces about
"poetry of place"; the work of Basil Bunting, Tomas Transtromer,
David Jones, Robert Duncan, and Hugh MacDiarmid; the fiction of
poets; poetry in film and opera; and the literary dangers of
finding "religious feeling" in texts that are really dealing with
secular emotions. At Large also functions as a kind of anthology,
reprinting excerpts, with Matthias' introduction, of John Peck's
book-length poem Cantilena (Shearsman, 2016) and James Walton's
unpublished novel The Progress of Romance. The book contains two
interviews, the author's with Larry Siems, former free-speech
trouble-shooter for American PEN and a former student, and Joe
Francis Doerr's three-part conversation with the author. It is a
book full of variety and surprises, one of them an illustrated
lecture on the collaboration between screen siren Hedy Lemarr and
avant-garde composer George Antheil as they appear in Matthias'
poem-play, Automystifstical Plaice: A Spread Spectrum Cabaret.
Different Kinds of Music follows Timothy "Westy" Westmont through
six episodes from his childhood and youth, through his experiences
as an archivist and a thief, to encounters with William Faulkner's
bear in St. Louis, Hemingway's lingering ghost at Walloon Lake in
Michigan, and Phillip Roth's Goodbye, Columbus in Columbus, Ohio
itself. The narrative is sometimes funny, sometimes sad; and it
progresses in an order more interesting than the merely
chronological. Between the episodes appears a sequence of
interchapters about music, the different kinds of which define
Westmont's experience from the 1940s to the turn of the 21st
century in an idiom different from that of the narrative parts of
the book. Different, too, is the final long chapter, "Westmont as
Talbot Eastmore," in which the author of the previous five episodes
tells his own story in terms of a miniature bildungsroman which is
also an elegy for an old friend.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ The 'J.B. Gough' Series Of Temperance Dialogues adapted From
His Speeches]. John Matthias
Chronologically the first, Collected Shorter Poems, Vol. 1 is
editorially the third of John Matthias's three-volume Shearsman
Collected Poems. It includes the poems that first made Matthias's
reputation-experimental work like 'Turns: Toward a Provisional
Poetics and a Discipline'; politically activist poems from the
1960s and '70s such as his elegy for the Kent State University
students killed by the Ohio National Guard; poems written from his
fifteen years of living off and on in Suffolk; poems articulating
an aesthetic of play-and-game like 'Clarifications for Robert
Jacoby'; along with several epistolary poems, explorations of
place, and family-oriented lyrics, such as the often translated and
reprinted 'Poem for Cynouai.' This volume joins Collected Shorter
Poems, Vol. 2 and Collected Longer Poems in bringing together all
of the poetry, with the exception of Trigons (available separately
from Shearsman), that Matthias wishes to preserve.
The second volume in the Collected Poems of John Matthias,
following Vol. 2 of the Shorter Poems in 2011, this volume covers
all of the author's long poems from before 2010. That year's
Trigons is excluded and remains available from Shearsman. Texts
included in the book are: Facts from an Apocryphal Midwest (1986);
Northern Summer (1980-1983); The Stefan Batory Poems (1973); The
Mihail Lermontov Poems (1976); An East Anglian Diptych (1990);
Cuttings (1995); Pages: From a Book of Years (1998);
Automystifstical Plaice (2000); Laundry Lists and Manifestoes
(2003) and Kedging in Time (2006).
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ The Principles Of Morals, Volumes 1-2; The Principles Of
Morals; Thomas Fowler Thomas Fowler, John Matthias Wilson Clarendon
Press, 1886 Ethics
|
You may like...
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
|