Tag: Poetry

The astonishment tapes talks on poetry and autobiography with Robin Blaser and friends


Free Download The astonishment tapes : talks on poetry and autobiography with Robin Blaser and friends By Robin Blaser & Dr. Miriam Nichols Ph.d:
2015 | 344 Pages | ISBN: 0817358099 | PDF | 2 MB
Robin Blaser moved from his native Idaho to attend the University of California, Berkeley, in 1944. While there, he developed as a poet, explored his homosexuality, engaged in a lively arts community, and met fellow travelers and poets Robert Duncan and Jack Spicer. The three men became the founding members of the Berkeley core of what is now known as the San Francisco Renaissance in New American Poetry.In the company of a small group of friends and writers in 1974, Blaser was asked to narrate his personal story and to comment on the Berkeley poetry scene. In twenty autobiographical audiotapes, Blaser talks about his childhood in Idaho, his time in Berkeley, and his participation in the making of a new kind of poetry. The Astonishment Tapes is the expertly edited transcript of these recordings by Miriam Nichols, Blaser’s editor and biographer.In The Astonishment Tapes Blaser comments extensively on the poetic principles that he, Duncan, and Spicer worked through, as well as the differences and dissonances between the three of them. Nichols has edited the transcripts only minimally, allowing readers to make their own interpretations of Blaser’s intentions.Sometimes gossipy, sometimes profound, Blaser offers his version on the inside story of one of the most significant moments in mid-twentieth century American poetry. The Astonishment Tapes is of considerable value and interest, not only to readers of Blaser, Duncan, and Spicer, but also to scholars of the early postmodern and twentieth-century American poetry.

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The Age of Auden Postwar Poetry and the American Scene


Free Download The Age of Auden : Postwar Poetry and the American Scene By Wasley, Aidan; Auden, Wystan Hugh
2011 | 281 Pages | ISBN: 0691136793 | EPUB | 1 MB
W. H. Auden’s emigration from England to the United States in 1939 marked more than a turning point in his own life and work–it changed the course of American poetry itself. The Age of Auden takes, for the first time, the full measure of Auden’s influence on American poetry. Combining a broad survey of Auden’s midcentury U.S. cultural presence with an account of his dramatic impact on a wide range of younger American poets–from Allen Ginsberg to Sylvia Plath–the book offers a new history of postwar American poetry. For Auden, facing private crisis and global catastrophe, moving to the United States became, in the famous words of his first American poem, a new "way of happening." But his redefinition of his work had a significance that was felt far beyond the pages of his own books. Aidan Wasley shows how Auden’s signal role in the work and lives of an entire younger generation of American poets challenges conventional literary histories that place Auden outside the American poetic tradition. In making his case, Wasley pays special attention to three of Auden’s most distinguished American inheritors, presenting major new readings of James Merrill, John Ashbery, and Adrienne Rich. The result is a persuasive and compelling demonstration of a novel claim: In order to understand modern American poetry, we need to understand Auden’s central place within it.

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Romantic Daemons in the Poetry of Blake, Shelley and Keats Beyond the Human


Free Download Nicholas Meihuizen, "Romantic Daemons in the Poetry of Blake, Shelley and Keats: Beyond the Human"
English | ISBN: 152757752X | 2024 | 467 pages | PDF | 2 MB
This book offers detailed readings of relevant works by Blake, Shelley and Keats, to bring together what is loosely termed as Hermetic tradition, British Romantic poetry and responses to the present crises regarding our life on the planet, including those linked to the notion of posthumanism. This conjunction of forces, so to speak, points beyond the boundaries erected by general sociological complacency and the acceptance of humankind as the centre of existence on Earth, to affirm the value of the non-human world and the possibilities inherent in an awareness of its subtler manifestations. Although the idea of spiritual agency might stretch the bounds of credulity, for centuries the inspired imagination has been considered daemonic; that is, it brings to artists and poets (and certain scientists, indeed) a sense of heightened consciousness, seemingly from beyond the self. Whatever causality may be at play here, it is clear that instances of an exalted outlook on life exist in abundance in the poetry of Blake, Shelley and Keats. The present book explores them and their implications.

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Romantic Daemons in the Poetry of Blake, Shelley and Keats Beyond the Human


Free Download Nicholas Meihuizen, "Romantic Daemons in the Poetry of Blake, Shelley and Keats: Beyond the Human"
English | ISBN: 152757752X | 2024 | 467 pages | PDF | 2 MB
This book offers detailed readings of relevant works by Blake, Shelley and Keats, to bring together what is loosely termed as Hermetic tradition, British Romantic poetry and responses to the present crises regarding our life on the planet, including those linked to the notion of posthumanism. This conjunction of forces, so to speak, points beyond the boundaries erected by general sociological complacency and the acceptance of humankind as the centre of existence on Earth, to affirm the value of the non-human world and the possibilities inherent in an awareness of its subtler manifestations. Although the idea of spiritual agency might stretch the bounds of credulity, for centuries the inspired imagination has been considered daemonic; that is, it brings to artists and poets (and certain scientists, indeed) a sense of heightened consciousness, seemingly from beyond the self. Whatever causality may be at play here, it is clear that instances of an exalted outlook on life exist in abundance in the poetry of Blake, Shelley and Keats. The present book explores them and their implications.

(more…)

Poetry-Painting Affinity as Intersemiotic Translation


Free Download Chengzhi Jiang, "Poetry-Painting Affinity as Intersemiotic Translation: A Cognitive Stylistic Study of Landscape Representation in Wang Wei’s Poetry and its Translation"
English | 2020 | pages: 180 | ISBN: 9811523592, 9811523568 | PDF | 3,5 mb
This book interprets the close intimacy between poetry and painting from the perspective of intersemiotic translation, by providing a systematic examination of the bilingual and visual representation of landscape in the poetry of Wang Wei, a high Tang poet who won worldwide reputation. The author’s subtle analysis ranges from epistemological issues of language philosophy and poetry translation to the very depths where the later Heidegger and Tao-oriented Chinese wisdom can co-work to reveal their ontological inter-rootedness through a two-level cognitive-stylisitc research methodology.

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Poetry-Painting Affinity as Intersemiotic Translation


Free Download Chengzhi Jiang, "Poetry-Painting Affinity as Intersemiotic Translation: A Cognitive Stylistic Study of Landscape Representation in Wang Wei’s Poetry and its Translation"
English | 2020 | pages: 180 | ISBN: 9811523592, 9811523568 | PDF | 3,5 mb
This book interprets the close intimacy between poetry and painting from the perspective of intersemiotic translation, by providing a systematic examination of the bilingual and visual representation of landscape in the poetry of Wang Wei, a high Tang poet who won worldwide reputation. The author’s subtle analysis ranges from epistemological issues of language philosophy and poetry translation to the very depths where the later Heidegger and Tao-oriented Chinese wisdom can co-work to reveal their ontological inter-rootedness through a two-level cognitive-stylisitc research methodology.

(more…)

Poetry and the Global Climate Crisis


Free Download Amatoritsero Ede, "Poetry and the Global Climate Crisis "
English | ISBN: 103250854X | 2023 | 260 pages | EPUB, PDF | 1495 KB + 3 MB
This book demonstrates how humans can become sensitized to, and intervene in, environmental degradation by writing, reading, analyzing, and teaching poetry. It offers both theoretical and practice-based essays, providing a diversity of approaches and voices that will be useful in the classroom and beyond.

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Poetry and Sustainability in Education


Free Download Sandra Lee Kleppe, "Poetry and Sustainability in Education "
English | ISBN: 3030955753 | 2022 | 331 pages | PDF | 5 MB
This edited collection offers educators at all levels a range of practical and theoretical approaches to teaching poetry in the context of environmental sustainability. The contributors are keenly aware of the urgency facing the planet’s ecosystems―ecosystems which include all of us―and this volume makes the case that teaching poetry is not a luxury. Each of the book’s three sections works from a specific angle and register. Part I focuses on pragmatic approaches to classroom activities and curricular choices; Part II considers policies and politics, including the role of the UN’s Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) program; and Part III takes a widescreen view, exploring the philosophical issues that arise when poems are integrated into sustainability curricula. This book exemplifies how poetry empowers readers to think imaginatively about how to sustain―and why to sustain―our world, its resources, and its beauty.

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Media poetry an international anthology


Free Download Media poetry : an international anthology By Kac, Eduardo
2007 | 296 Pages | ISBN: 1841500305 | PDF | 8 MB
Book annotation not available for this title.Title: Media PoetryAuthor: Kac, Eduaro (EDT)✅Publisher: Univ of Chicago PrPublication Date: 2007/10/10Number of Pages: 296Binding Type: PAPERBACKLibrary of Congress:

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Defensive Measures The Poetry Of Niedecker, Bishop, Gluck, And Carson


Free Download Lee Upton, "Defensive Measures: The Poetry Of Niedecker, Bishop, Gluck, And Carson"
English | 2005 | ISBN: 0838756077 | PDF | pages: 144 | 0.6 mb
Much of our strongest poetry that learned its lessons from early modernism lives by its defensive measures, that is, by means of reversing, inverting, and challenging in covert ways a dominant perceptual mode. Defensive Measures explores strategies by which poets claim their distinctiveness, and argues that poetry is the one literary form that most insistently demands a defense. It demands a defense, it would seem, because it is perpetually in crisis – not only in regard to its utility and its aesthetic appeal (or the vigor of its renunciation of such an appeal), but in regard to its generic existence. Upton defines a generative conception of defense and examines in a new light the poetry of Lorine Niedecker, Elizabeth Bishop, Louise Gluck, and Anne Carson. In writing about Bishop. Upton puts this well-regarded poet in a new framework, aligning her work with that of three poets whose aesthetics might be viewed as antithetical to her own …

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