The Last Chapter of "Progress". A Fragment in Doggerel Rhymes
Author: Chapter
Publisher:
Published: 1873
Total Pages: 32
ISBN-13:
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Author: Chapter
Publisher:
Published: 1873
Total Pages: 32
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Catherine Reilly
Publisher: A&C Black
Published: 2000-01-01
Total Pages: 583
ISBN-13: 0720123186
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThese two volumes list late-and mid-Victorian poets, with brief biographical information and bibliographical details of published works. The major strength of the works is the 'discovery' of very many minor poets and their work, unrecorded elsewhere.
Author: James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps
Publisher:
Published: 1849
Total Pages: 296
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Ralph Waldo Emerson
Publisher: London
Published: 1883
Total Pages: 300
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Donald Wesling
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 1980-01-01
Total Pages: 186
ISBN-13: 9780520038615
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Charles Bernstein
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 2013-03-13
Total Pages: 202
ISBN-13: 0226925307
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLong anticipated, Recalculating is Charles Bernstein’s first full-length collection of new poems in seven years. As a result of this lengthy time under construction, the scope, scale, and stylistic variation of the poems far surpasses Bernstein’s previous work. Together, the poems of Recalculating take readers on a journey through the history and poetics of the decades since the end of the Cold War as seen through the lens of social and personal turbulence and tragedy. The collection’s title, the now–familiar GPS expression, suggests a change in direction due to a mistaken or unexpected turn. For Bernstein, formal invention is a necessary swerve in the midst of difficulty. As in all his work since the 1970s, he makes palpable the idea that radically new structures, appropriated forms, an aversion to received ideas and conventions, political engagement, and syntactic novelty will open the doors of perception to exuberance and resonance, from giddiness to pleasure to grief. But at the same time he cautions, with typical deflationary ardor, “The pen is tinier than the sword.” In these poems, Bernstein makes good on his claim that “the poetry is not in speaking to the dead but listening to the dead.” In doing so, Recalculating incorporates translations and adaptations of Baudelaire, Cole Porter, Mandelstam, and Paul Celan, as well as several tributes to writers crucial to Bernstein’s work and a set of epigrammatic verse essays that combine poetics with wry observation, caustic satire, and aesthetic slapstick. Formally stunning and emotionally charged, Recalculating makes the familiar strange—and in a startling way, makes the strange familiar. Into these poems, brimming with sonic and rhythmic intensity, philosophical wit, and multiple personae, life events intrude, breaking down any easy distinction between artifice and the real. With works that range from elegy to comedy, conceptual to metrical, expressionist to ambient, uproarious to procedural, aphoristic to lyric, Bernstein has created a journey through the dark striated by bolts of imaginative invention and pure delight.
Author: John Borthwick Gilchrist
Publisher:
Published: 1796
Total Pages: 360
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Helen Cox
Publisher: History Press
Published: 2019-11-19
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9780750992596
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA pictorial and historical guide to London's old brick adverts
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Publisher:
Published: 1949
Total Pages: 392
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Francesco Venturi
Publisher: BRILL
Published: 2019-05-15
Total Pages: 445
ISBN-13: 9004396594
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis volume investigates the various ways in which writers comment on, present, and defend their own works, and at the same time themselves, across early modern Europe. A multiplicity of self-commenting modes, ranging from annotations to explicatory prose to prefaces to separate critical texts and exemplifying a variety of literary genres, are subjected to analysis. Self-commentaries are more than just an external apparatus: they direct and control reception of the primary text, thus affecting notions of authorship and readership. With the writer understood as a potentially very influential and often tendentious interpreter of their own work, the essays in this collection offer new perspectives on pre-modern and modern forms of critical self-consciousness, self-representation, and self-validation. Contributors are Harriet Archer, Gilles Bertheau, Carlo Caruso, Jeroen De Keyser, Russell Ganim, Joseph Harris, Ian Johnson, Richard Maber, Martin McLaughlin, John O’Brien, Magdalena Ożarska, Federica Pich, Brian Richardson, Els Stronks, and Colin Thompson.