Parallel Resting Places

Parallel Resting Places

Author: Laura Wetherington

Publisher:

Published: 2021

Total Pages: 74

ISBN-13: 9781643171906

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Winner of the New Measure Poetry Prize Selected by Peter Gizzi Free Verse Editions, edited by Jon Thompson What happens when a poet tries to filter the untranslatable from another language? The rush of unknowing, decoding the wind, the body becomes an antenna. Following behind Jack Spicer's After Lorca and swinging its ovaries, Laura Wetherington's second book uses the concept of translation to create original poems from the work of writers like Liliane Giraudon, Marie Étienne, Dominique Fourcade, and Jean-Marie Gleize. These poems run through a liminal linguistic space where meaning, mishearing, and dreams collide, sometimes midsentence, where they hinge into song: "My man animal took shape in a shadow, / climbed over an obstacle, / became the void." Interstitial love letters to queer writers process a miscarriage, the most recent election, and queer puppy love. This is a book of yearning-for a foreign tongue, for a body growing inside the body, and for a form of communication that can capture feeling. There is a constant textual drama in the address and voice of Laura Wetherington's heady poems; a mirror staged. With monologues, letters, lyrics, and prose she performs a writing through to a new ground of sensation and thinking. Call it the present. The music is gorgeous and the sound is captivating. Parallel Resting Places is a wonderful book and a welcome addition to a tradition that troubles tradition. -Peter Gizzi Laura Wetherington's first book, A Map Predetermined and Chance, was selected by C.S. Giscombe for the National Poetry Series. She published a chapbook with Bateau Press, chosen by Arielle Greenberg for the Keel Hybrid Competition. Her work appears in Narrative, Michigan Quarterly Review, Colorado Review, FENCE, and VOLT, among others, and in three anthologies, The Sonnets: Translating and Rewriting Shakespeare (Nightboat Books), Choice Words: Writers on Abortion (Haymarket Books), and 60 Morning Talks (Ugly Duckling Presse). Laura's essays and book reviews have been published in Kenyon Review, The Volta, Hyperallergic, Full Stop, Jacket2, and The University of Arizona Poetry Center's 1508. A teacher in SNU Tahoe's MFA Program and at Amsterdam University College, Laura's also the poetry editor at Baobab Press.


The Poem She Didn't Write and Other Poems

The Poem She Didn't Write and Other Poems

Author: Olena Kalytiak Davis

Publisher: Copper Canyon Press

Published: 2015-07-01

Total Pages: 118

ISBN-13: 1619321211

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The Poem She Didn’t Write is a whirlwind of sound, syntax, and form, working together to amplify everyday experience.


Selected Poetry of Ebenezer Elliott

Selected Poetry of Ebenezer Elliott

Author: Ebenezer Elliott

Publisher: Associated University Presse

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 278

ISBN-13: 9780838641347

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Ebenezer Elliott (1781-1849) is best known in literary history as the self-styled Corn Law Rhymer because of his savage satirical poems published in the 1830s. With detailed introduction and explanatory notes, this work is intended to bring Elliott's work into the public domain, directed at both students of the period and the general reader.


Law in the Courts of Love

Law in the Courts of Love

Author: Peter Goodrich

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2002-11-01

Total Pages: 294

ISBN-13: 1134925786

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Law in the Courts of Love traces the literary history and diversity of past legal systems. These 'minor jurisprudences' range from the spiritual laws of the courts of conscience to the code and judgements of love handed down by women's courts in medieval France. Professor Goodrich presents the 15th Century Courts of Love in Paris as one instance of an alternative jurisdiction drawn from the diversities of the legal and literary past. Their textual records are correspondingly mixed in genre, being in the form of poems, narratives, plays, treaties and judicial decisions. More broadly, these studies trace certain boundaries of modern law and make up one of many forms of legal knowledge which escape today's vision of a unitary law. The author believes that the unquesionable faith in a unity law and its distance from person and emotion is precisely what makes impossible the attention to the individual that justice ultimately requires. Law in the Courts of Love shows how the historical diversity of forms and procedures of law can competently form the basis for critical revisions of contemporary legal doctrine and professional practice. This book will be of interest to undergraduate and postgraduate students of law and literature, critical legal studies and legal history, or anyone wishing to specialise in feminist legal theory.