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Ashbery's Forms of Attention First Edition, Edition
Contributor(s): DuBois, Andrew Lee (Author)
ISBN: 081731489X     ISBN-13: 9780817314897
Publisher: University Alabama Press
OUR PRICE:   $33.20  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: July 2006
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Annotation: A major contribution to Ashbery studies and to poetics in general. Andrew DuBois assesses John Ashbery's career as a poet in the context of changes in 20th-century aesthetics, the rise of the information age, and the proliferation of aural and visual stimuli. The issue of attention, he argues, is useful not only for understanding the problems of perception and concentration in an age of information overload but also for understanding how Ashbery's poetry and poetry in general contend with those issues. Ashbery's art, DuBois demonstrates, embodies the conflicts between traditional and postmodern forms of communication. The lack of traditional narrative frameworks or forms in Ashbery's poems creates problems of attention. This strategy places a heavy burden on the reader, since Ashbery's content--a melange of cultural references and sympathies--defies set forms. Yet Ashbery's concern with traditional poetic conventions is still clear in his work, and it is the tension between past and present modes of poetic discourse that best describes Ashbery's work as a poet. Among other subjects DuBois addresses Ashbery's many roles--as theorist, postmodern metaphysical, and enemy of poetic decorum; his experiments in ekphrasis (poems that take other art works as their subjects); his prose; his mastery of the long form as a vehicle for extended meditation; and his use of stream-of-consciousness as a poetic strategy. In highlighting the major aesthetic and cultural impulses underlying Ashbery's work, DuBois illuminates not only the lasting relevance of his poetry but also the larger issues of attention and perception in reading, thinking, and being in the postmodern era. *Recipient of the ElizabethAgee Prize for the best manuscript in American literature Andrew DuBois is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Toronto at Scarborough. He received his Ph.D. in English and American Literature from Harvard University in 2003 and was the recipient of a Whiting Fellowship in the Humanities from the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation for 2002-03.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Poetry | American - General
Dewey: 811.54
LCCN: 2005031996
Series: Modern and Contemporary Poetics (Hardcover)
Physical Information: 0.7" H x 6.26" W x 9.06" (0.96 lbs) 192 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
A major contribution to Ashbery studies and to poetics

Andrew DuBois assesses John Ashbery's career as a poet in the context of changes in 20th-century aesthetics, the rise of the information age, and the proliferation of aural and visual stimuli. The issue of attention, he argues, is useful not only for understanding the problems of perception and concentration in an age of information overload but also for understanding how Ashbery's poetry and poetry in general contend with those issues.

Ashbery's art, DuBois demonstrates, embodies the conflicts between traditional and postmodern forms of communication. The lack of traditional narrative frameworks or forms in Ashbery's poems creates problems of attention. This strategy places a heavy burden on the reader, since Ashbery's content--a mélange of cultural references and sympathies--defies set forms. Yet Ashbery's concern with traditional poetic conventions is still clear in his work, and it is the tension between past and present modes of poetic discourse that best describes Ashbery's work as a poet.

Among other subjects DuBois addresses Ashbery's many roles--as theorist, postmodern metaphysical, and enemy of poetic decorum; his experiments in ekphrasis (poems that take other art works as their subjects); his prose; his mastery of the long form as a vehicle for extended meditation; and his use of stream-of-consciousness as a poetic strategy. In highlighting the major aesthetic and cultural impulses underlying Ashbery's work, DuBois illuminates not only the lasting relevance of his poetry but also the larger issues of attention and perception in reading, thinking, and being in the postmodern era