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Title:
The ocean, the bird, and the scholar : essays on poets and poetry / Helen Vendler.
Author:
Vendler, Helen, 1933- author.
Publication Information:
Cambridge, Massachusetts ; London, England : Harvard University Press, 2015.
Call Number:
PN1031 .V365 2015
Abstract:
"One of our foremost commentators on poetry examines the work of a broad range of nineteenth- and twentieth-century English, Irish, and American poets. The Ocean, the Bird, and the Scholar gathers two decades worth of Helen Vendler's essays, book reviews, and occasional prose including the 2004 Jefferson Lecture in a single volume. Taken together, they serve as a reminder that if the arts and the patina of culture they cast over the world were deleted, we would, in Wallace Stevens's memorable formulation, inhabit a geography of the dead. These essays also remind us that without the enthusiasm, critiques, and books of each century's scholars, there would be imperfect perpetuation and transmission of culture. All of the modern poets who have long preoccupied Vendler - Wallace Stevens, Seamus Heaney, John Ashbery, and Jorie Graham - are fully represented, as well as others, including Langston Hughes, Allen Ginsberg, Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop, Amy Clampitt, James Merrill, A.R. Ammons, and Mark Ford. And Vendler reaches back into the poetic tradition, tracing the influence of Keats, Yeats, Whitman, T.S. Eliot, and others in today's poets. As ever, her readings help to clarify the imaginative novelty of poems, giving us a rich sense not only of their formal aspects but also of the passions underlying their linguistic and structural invention. The Ocean, the Bird, and the Scholar is an eloquent plea for the centrality, both in humanistic study and modern culture, of poetry's beautiful, subversive, sustaining, and demanding legacy."--Jacket.
ISBN:
9780674736566
Physical Description:
viii, 444 pages ; 25 cm
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Contents:
The ocean, the bird, and the scholar: how the arts help us to live -- Fin-de-Siè̀̀cle lyric: W.B. Yeats and Jorie Graham -- The unweary blues: the collected poems of Langston Hughes -- The nothing that is: Chickamauga, by Charles Wright -- American X-rays: forty years of Allen Ginsberg's poetry -- The waste land: fragments and montage -- The snow poems and garbage: episodes in A.R. Ammons's poetics -- All her nomads: collected poems, by Amy Clampitt -- Seamus Heaney and the Oresteia: "Mycenae Lookout" and the usefulness of tradition -- Melville: the lyric of history -- Lowell's persistence: the forms depression makes -- Wallace Stevens: hypotheses and contradictions, dedicated to Paul Alpers -- Ardor and artifice: Merrill's Mozartian touch -- The titles: A.R. Ammons, 1926-2001 -- Poetry and the mediation of value: Whitman on Lincoln -- "Long pig": the interconnection of the exotic, the dead, and the fantastic in the poetry of Elizabeth Bishop -- Stevens and Keats's "To Autumn": reworking the past -- "The circulation of small largenesses": Mark Ford and John Ashbery -- Wallace Stevens: memory, dead and alive -- Jorie Graham: the moment of excess -- Attention, shoppers: Where shall I wander, by John Ashbery -- Seamus Heaney's "Sweeney Redivivus": its plot and its poems -- The democratic eye: A Worldly Country, by John Ashbery -- Losing the marbles: James Merrill on Greece -- Mark Ford: intriguing, funny, prophetic -- Notes from the trepidarium: Stay, Illusion, by Lucie Brock-Broido -- Pried open for all the world to see: Berryman the poet.
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