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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

How to Read Any Poem, Anywhere: Part 1



The first of a series of twenty.

3 comments:

  1. Laughing my ass off, here. What a wonderful way to start a new semester! Thanks for this, Tim. Excited to follow these over the semester...

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  2. Loved listening to this. This morning I read Barthes' "Style and Its Image"—I begin teaching next week—and noticed a version of an OOO claim therein, one I would like to explore. You probably know the text. He too says its forms all the way down. About a line of Balzac: "the 'first' content of the sentence is another form... and style is established in the effort of transformation applied not to ideas but to forms..."

    I look forward to hearing you talk more about form and force. What force meets the force of the poem? If the encounter of poem as papery, inky, white and black quasi-object and a reader can organize and affect this reader, then what's the right way to describe the reader's vulnerability, openness, etc. You've made me rethink my typical rejoinder: poems invite, solicit, etc. That now sounds mealy-mouthed. Some might, but not all.

    -j

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  3. I'm having some problems loading the content. Would be amazing If it was fixed. Something to do with adobe flash player. All classes seem to be down. Greetings

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