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Contemporary Poetics
Contributor(s): Armand, Louis (Editor)
ISBN: 0810123592     ISBN-13: 9780810123595
Publisher: Northwestern University Press
OUR PRICE:   $59.35  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: August 2007
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Poetry
Dewey: 809.911
LCCN: 2007023577
Series: Avant-Garde and Modernism Studies (Hardcover)
Physical Information: 1.45" H x 6.13" W x 9.12" (1.77 lbs) 432 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Exploring the boundaries of one of the most contested fields of literary study--a field that in fact shares territory with philology, aesthetics, cultural theory, philosophy, and even cybernetics--this volume gathers a body of critical writings that, taken together, broadly delineate a possible poetics of the contemporary. In these essays, the most interesting and distinguished theorists in the field renegotiate the contours of what might constitute contemporary poetics, ranging from the historical advent of concrete poetry to the current technopoetics of cyberspace. Concerned with a poetics that extends beyond our own time, as a mere marker of present-day literary activity, their work addresses the limits of a writing practice--beginning with St phane Mallarm in the late nineteenth century--that engages concretely with what it means to be contemporary.

Charles Bernstein's Swiftian satire of generative poetics and the textual apparatus, together with Marjorie Perloff's critical-historical treatment of writing after Bernstein and other proponents of language poetry, provides an itinerary of contemporary poetics in terms of both theory and practice. The other essays consider precursors, recognizable figures within the histories or prehistories of contemporary poetics, from Kafka and Joyce to Wallace Stevens and Kathy Acker; conjunctions, in which more strictly theoretical and poetical texts enact a concerted engagement with rhetoric, prosody, and the vicissitudes of intelligibility; cursors, which points to the open possibilities of invention, from Augusto de Campos's concrete poetics to the codework of Alan Sondheim; and transpositions, defining the limits of poetic invention by way of technology.