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William Carlos Williams' Indian Son(G)
The News from That Strange, Far Away Land: William Carlos Williams’ Indian Son(g) Graziano Krätli YALE UNIVERSITY 1. In his later years, William Carlos Williams entertained a long epistolary relationship with the Indian poet Srinivas Rayaprol (1925-98), one of a handful who contributed to the modernization of Indian poetry in English in the first few decades after the independence from British rule. The two met only once or twice, but their correspondence, started in the fall of 1949, when Rayaprol was a graduate student at Stanford University, continued long after his return to India, ending only a few years before Williams’ passing. Although Williams had many correspondents in his life, most of them more important and better known literary figures than Rayaprol, the young Indian from the southeastern state of Andhra Pradesh was one of the very few non-Americans and the only one from a postcolonial country with a long and glorious literary tradition of its own. More important, perhaps, their correspondence occurred in a decade – the 1950s – in which a younger generation of Indian poets writing in English was assimilating the lessons of Anglo-American Modernism while increasingly turning their attention away from Britain to America. Rayaprol, doubly advantaged by virtue of “being there” (i.e., in the Bay Area at the beginning of the San Francisco Renaissance) and by his mentoring relationship with Williams, was one of the very first to imbibe the new poetic idiom from its sources, and also one of the most persistent in trying to keep those sources alive and meaningful, to him if not to his fellow poets in India. -
The Development of Dylan Thomas' Use of Private Symbolism in Poetry A.Nne" Marie Delap Master of Arts
THE DEVELOPMENT OF DYLAN THOMAS' USE OF PRIVATE SYMBOLISM IN POETRY By A.NNE" MARIE DELAP \\ Bachelor of Arts Oklahoma State University Stillwater, Oklahoma 1964 ~ubmitted to the faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS May, 1967 0DAHOMI STATE IJIIVERsifi'li' 1-~BR,AYRV dlNlQN THE DEVELOPMENT OF DYLAN THOMAS O USE OF PRIVATE SYMBOLISM IN POETRY Thesis Approved: n n 11,~d Dean of the Graduate College 658670 f.i PREFACE In spite of numerous explications that have been written about Dylan Thomas' poems, there has been little attention given the growth and change in his symbolism. This study does not pretend to be comprehensive, but will atte~pt, within the areas designated by the titles of chapters 2, 3, and 4, to trace this development. The terms early 129ems and later poems will apply to the poetry finished before and after 1939, which was the year of the publication of The Map tl Love. A number of Thomas• mature poems existed in manu- script form before 1939, but were rewritten and often drastically altered before appearing in their final form. .,After the funera1° ' i is one of these: Thomas conceived the idea for the poem in 1933, but its final form, which appeared in The Map .Q! ~' represents a complete change from the early notebook version. Poem titles which appear in this study have been capitalized according to standard prac- tice, except when derived from the first line of a poem; in thes,e cases only the first word is capitalized. -
11 Ronald Mar and the Trope of Life
11 Ronald Mar and the Trope of Life The Translation of Western Modernist Poetry in Hong Kong Chris Song Abstract This essay examines the Chinese-language debut of Western surrealist poetry in Hong Kong and its effect on the local poetry scene through the work of Ronald Mar 馬朗, from the early years of the Cold War era onward. It traces the trope of poetry being “true to life” – as resistance to the surrealist influence – through evolving notions and experiences of Hong Kong identity over time, up to the present day in the post-handover era. Keywords: Chinese poetry, translation, Ronald Mar, Hong Kong, modern- ism, surrealism Twenty years since the handover of sovereignty from the British Crown to the People’s Republic of China, Hong Kong society has known increasingly severe conflicts with China, fueled by animosity toward the mainland among the local population. Growing up in such a politically intense environment, Hong Kong youths feel that political and economic systems have conspired to leave them a hopeless future. As their demand for universal suffrage in the election of the Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government was denied in September 2014, their anxiety finally broke into realization as the Umbrella Movement. Apart from responding through poetry to this large democratic movement, some young local poets perceived a need to redefine the “localness” of Hong Kong poetry. Though without much theoretical depth, their quest is quite clear: they believe that the localness of their poetic language lies, paradoxically, in the distance from external reality – a symbolic denial of the Umbrella Movement’s failed demands for universal suffrage, or any further realistic democratization, in Van Crevel, Maghiel and Lucas Klein (eds.), Chinese Poetry and Translation: Rights and Wrongs. -
The Computer As Author and Artifice
University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1996 Silicon poetics| The computer as author and artifice Lawrence Andrew Koch The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Koch, Lawrence Andrew, "Silicon poetics| The computer as author and artifice" (1996). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 3555. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/3555 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Maureen and Mike MANSFIELD LIBRARY The University of J M O N T A N A Pennission is granted by the author to reproduce tliis material in its entirety, provided that tliis material is used for scholarly purposes and is properly cited in published works and reports. ** Please check "Yes" or "No" and provide signature** Yes, I grant permission No, I do not grant permission Author's Signature D ate Any copying for commercial purposes or financial gain may be undertaken only with tlie author's explicit consent. SILICON POETICS: THE COMPUTER AS AUTHOR AND ARTIFICE by Lawrence Andrew Koch B. A., Rutgers College, Rutgers University, 1991 Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English (Literature option) The University of Montana 1996 Approved by: Chair, Board of Examiners Dean, Graduate School Date UMI Number: EP35509 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. -
DOCTORAL THESIS Stack Minimalist Poetics Davies, James
DOCTORAL THESIS stack Minimalist Poetics Davies, James Award date: 2018 General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. • Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. • You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain • You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal ? Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 28. Sep. 2021 DAVIES 1 stack: Minimalist Poetics By James Davies BA (hons), MA. A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of PhD Department of English and Creative Writing Roehampton University 2018 DAVIES 2 Abstract stack: Minimalist Poetics consists of a portfolio of practice-led research — a volume-length minimalist poem entitled stack — and a critical essay. The poem applies and adapts several minimalist writing strategies, which are evaluated in the critical essay to create a text that is rich in imagery yet indeterminate in meaning. In addition, stack is innovative in its structural approach — through original use of enjambment, footnoting and repetition, lines may be treated as discrete entities and, also, as combinations. A key research question that the practice- led component and the critical essay interrogate is the applicability and development of the poetics of the “New Sentence”, and other formally innovative approaches in the field of minimalist writing The first part of the critical essay contextualises the creative portfolio in relation to the field of minimalist poetics as a whole. -
Symbolism in Blake's Animal Poems “Lamb and Tyger” An
Research Journal of English Language and Literature (RJELAL) Vol.5.Issue 1. 2017 A Peer Reviewed (Refereed) International Journal (Jan-Mar) http://www.rjelal.com; Email:[email protected] RESEARCH ARTICLE SYMBOLISM IN BLAKE’S ANIMAL POEMS “LAMB AND TYGER” AN ANALYTICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE STUDY AMAL M.A.IBRAHIM* & YOUSIF OMER BABIKER University of Jeddah College of Sciences and Arts province *Email:[email protected] ABSTRACT The objectives of this study are attempts to clarify animal symbolism in some of Blake’s work in the “Songs of Innocence & Experience” especially The Lamb & “The Tiger.” The study provides a general survey of Symbolism by tracing the early origins and precursors of Symbolism. In “The Songs of Innocence” William Blake tries to reflect the child’s innocence and ignorance of worldliness through the innocent lamb in The Lamb poem. While “The Songs of Experience” According to Bowra (1969), The Songs of Experience are of a pessimistic view of life that has been conveyed through Blake's symbolic use of language. ©KY PUBLICATIONS INTRODUCTION 4) wrote that “Although the school of symbolism The word symbol is derived from appeared in France in 1880, but one thousand year "'symballein, meaning ‘to throw together’, from the before appearing this school, people used symbols Greek ‘symbolon’ and Latin ‘symbolum’, which for expressing their feelings and thoughts about meant token, sign” Webster (2003: 1190) phenomena, life and death. "The founders of school 2‘Symbolism’ is a technique used in literature when of symbolism were three great poets, Stephan some things are not to be taken literally. As Perrine Mallarme, Poul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud, who (1974)3 states, "a literary symbol is something that used symbols for expressing their thoughts" Wellek, means more than what it is. -
An Overview of Sign Language Poetry
An overview of sign language poetry Rachel Sutton-Spence, [email protected] European Cultural Heritage Online (ECHO), http://www.let.kun.nl/sign-lang/echo/docs December 2003 What is Sign Language Poetry? A general definition of poetry is "an aesthetically purposeful distortion of standard language". The language in poems deliberately breaks the rules of standard language in order for the text/utterance to be noticed as language. Sign language poets have also summarised what poetry means to them. Dot Miles: "[It's] a way of putting meaning very briefly so people will see it and feel very strongly". Clayton Valli: "Poetry is using esthetic criteria for placement of words, instead of custom…Beauty of phrase, intensity of motion, and ingeniousness of technique are poetry's substance." Sign language poetry is the ultimate form of aesthetic signing, in which the form of language used is as important as - or even more important than - the message. Like so much poetry in any language, sign language poetry is a means of expressing ideas unusually succinctly, through means of heightened "art" language. It uses specific language devices to maximise the significance of the poem, just as in the poetry of spoken languages, although the language devices are rather different from the rhymes and alliteration that are familiar to most hearing audiences. The metaphors and images used in sign language poems may also be different from those in spoken language poems. In general, though, the basic idea of maximising the message through specially heightened language is the same in poetry in all languages, whether signed or spoken. -
Durham E-Theses
Durham E-Theses The contemporary long poem : spatial practice in the work of Kamau Brathwaite and Derek Walcott; Ed Dorn and Susan Howe; Robert Kroetsch and Daphne Marlatt. Thurgar-Dawson, Christopher Paul Joseph How to cite: Thurgar-Dawson, Christopher Paul Joseph (1998) The contemporary long poem : spatial practice in the work of Kamau Brathwaite and Derek Walcott; Ed Dorn and Susan Howe; Robert Kroetsch and Daphne Marlatt., Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/1054/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 THE CONTEMPORARY LONG POEM Spatial Practice in the Work of Kamau Brathwaite and Derek Walcott; Ed Dorn and Susan Howe; Robert ICroetsch and Daphne Marlatt Christopher Paul Joseph Thurgar-Dawson Thesis submitted for the Degree of PhD University of Durham, Department of English Studies The copyright of this thesis rests with the author. -
A Network Analysis of Postwar American Poetry in the Age of Digital Audio Archives Ankit Basnet and James Jaehoon Lee
Journal of April 20, 2021 Cultural Analytics A Network Analysis of Postwar American Poetry in the Age of Digital Audio Archives Ankit Basnet and James Jaehoon Lee Ankit Basnet, University of Cincinnati James Lee, University of Cincinnati Peer-Reviewer: Stephen Voyce Data Repository: 10.7910/DVN/NK7Z2H A B S T R A C T From the New American Poetry to New Formalism, publishing networks such as literary magazines and social scenes such as poetry reading series have served as a capacious model for understanding the varied poetic formations in the postwar period. As audio archives of poetry readings have been digitized in large volumes, Charles Bernstein has suggested that open access to digital archives allows readers of American poetry to create mixtapes in different configurations. Digital archives of poetry readings “offer an intriguing and powerful alternative” to organizing practices such as networks and scenes. Placing Bernstein’s definition of the digital audio archive into contact with more conventional understandings of poetic community gives us a composite vision of organizing principles in postwar American poetry. To accomplish this, we compared poetry reading venues as well as audio archives — alongside more familiar print networks constituted by poetry anthologies and magazines — as important and distinct sites of reception for American poetry. We used network analysis to visualize the relationships of individual poets to venues where they have read, archives where their readings are stored, and text anthologies where their poetry has been printed. Examining several types of poetic archives offers us a new perspective in how we perceive the relationships between poets and their “networks and scenes,” understood both in terms of print and audio culture, as well as trends and changes in the formation of these poetic communities and affiliations. -
Music, Lettrism, Avant-Gardes
H-Announce Invisible Republic: Music, Lettrism, Avant-Gardes Announcement published by Anabela Duarte on Monday, March 13, 2017 Type: Call for Papers Date: March 8, 2017 to April 28, 2017 Location: Portugal Subject Fields: American History / Studies, Cultural History / Studies, Music and Music History, Popular Culture Studies, Humanities PRESENTATION In Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes (1997), Greil Marcus charts a countercultural sound map, a kind of laboratory where a new language is being forged. This is where, Marcus argues, we can locate the true voice of the century, a new consciousness, the alchemy of an undiscovered country. From this starting-point, we propose a journey into the tangled relationship between music, the avant-gardes and counterculture. In 1942, Isidore Isou, a Jew from Romania, created in Bucharest an artistic and cultural trend that claimed for a “new republic” of letters. He brought it to Paris in 1945, and this became “Lettrism”, one of the most inventive but also one of the most unknown movements of the post-war avant-gardes. In 1947, he published a manifesto, an introduction to a new poetry and a new music that set forth Lettrism as a general movement of creation, a poetry liberated from words and syntax, and a number of propositions that constitute a fundamental historical link between the modern and the contemporary. Lettrism, it has been argued, was the progenitor of future upheavals and revolts, such as May ‘68, Punk, Situationism, Fluxus, among others. Music and sound, in this context, are powerful instruments of destruction and/or reconfiguration of language and the Arts. -
The Suturing of Poetic Ideology During the Early Years of the Loft and the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics
The Urgency of Community: The Suturing of Poetic Ideology During the Early Years of the Loft and the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY Rebecca Weaver IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Maria Damon and Jane Blocker, Co-advisers May 2011 Rebecca Weaver, Copyright 2011 Acknowledgements I owe a deep debt of thanks first to the directors of this project, Maria Damon and Jane Blocker, without whose genius, patience, and enthusiasm, this dissertation would have never existed. I am also incredibly and especially grateful for the insights and long conversations with my other committee members, Siobahn Craig and Edward Griffin. Many people, including poets, administrators, archivists, and program directors graciously gave me their time, words, and attention during the years I was researching this project: Amiri Baraka, Lisa Birman, Michael Dennis Browne, Reed Bye, Jack Collom, Clark and Susan Coolidge, Jim Dochniak, Phebe Hanson, Carla Harryman, Hettie Jones, Deborah Keenan, Ruth Kohtz, Eric Lorberer, Caroline Marshall, Sue Ann Martinson, Bernadette Mayers, John Minczeski, Jim Moore, Maureen Owen, Mary Rockcastle, Marly Rusoff, Greg Rutter, Larry Sutin, Anne Waldman, Lew Warsh, Marjorie Welish, David Wojahn, the staff at the Allen Ginsberg Library and Archives at Naropa University, the librarians at the Minnesota State Historical Society, the staff at the Special Collections Library at the University -
View / Open Summers Oregon 0171A 10923.Pdf
LAUGHTER SHARED OR THE GAMES POETS PLAY: THE ETHICS AND AESTHETICS OF IRONY IN POSTWAR AMERICAN POETRY by STEPHEN J. SUMMERS A DISSERTATION Presented to the Department of English and the Graduate School of the University of Oregon in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy June 2014 DISSERTATION APPROVAL PAGE Student: Stephen J. Summers Title: Laughter Shared or the Games Poets Play: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Irony in Postwar American Poetry This dissertation has been accepted and approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in the Department of English by: Mark Whalan Chairperson John Gage Core Member Paul Peppis Core Member Mark Johnson Institutional Representative and Kimberly Andrews Espy Vice President for Research and Innovation; Dean of the Graduate School Original approval signatures are on file with the University of Oregon Graduate School. Degree awarded June 2014 ii © 2014 Stephen J. Summers iii DISSERTATION ABSTRACT Stephen J. Summers Doctor of Philosophy Department of English June 2014 Title: Laughter Shared or the Games Poets Play: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Irony in Postwar American Poetry During and after the First World War, English-language poets employed various ironic techniques to address war’s dark absurdities. These methods, I argue, have various degrees of efficacy, depending upon the ethics of the poetry’s approach to its reading audience. I judge these ethical discourses according to a poem’s willingness to include its readers in the process of poetic construction, through a shared ironic connection. My central ethical test is Immanuel Kant’s categorical imperative and Jurgen Habermas’s conception of discourse ethics.