Poetic Machinations: Allegory, Surrealism, and Postmodern Poetic Form

Poetic Machinations: Allegory, Surrealism, and Postmodern Poetic Form

by Michael Golston
Poetic Machinations: Allegory, Surrealism, and Postmodern Poetic Form

Poetic Machinations: Allegory, Surrealism, and Postmodern Poetic Form

by Michael Golston

eBook

$48.99  $64.99 Save 25% Current price is $48.99, Original price is $64.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

The shape, lineation, and prosody of postmodern poems are extravagantly inventive, imbuing both form and content with meaning. Through a survey of American poetry and poetics from the end of World War II to the present, Michael Golston traces the proliferation of these experiments to a growing fascination with allegory in philosophy, linguistics, critical theory, and aesthetics, introducing new strategies for reading American poetry while embedding its formal innovations within the history of intellectual thought.

Beginning with Walter Benjamin's explicit understanding of Surrealism as an allegorical art, Golston defines a distinct engagement with allegory among philosophers, theorists, and critics from 1950 to today. Reading Fredric Jameson, Angus Fletcher, Roland Barthes, and Craig Owens, and working with the semiotics of Charles Sanders Pierce, Golston develops a theory of allegory he then applies to the poems of Louis Zukofsky and Lorine Niedecker, who, he argues, wrote in response to the Surrealists; the poems of John Ashbery and Clark Coolidge, who incorporated formal aspects of filmmaking and photography into their work; the groundbreaking configurations of P. Inman, Lyn Hejinian, Myung Mi Kim, and the Language poets; Susan Howe's "Pierce-Arrow," which he submits to semiotic analysis; and the innovations of Craig Dworkin and the conceptualists. Revitalizing what many consider to be a staid rhetorical trope, Golston positions allegory as a creative catalyst behind American poetry's postwar avant-garde achievements.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231538633
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 09/01/2015
Series: Literature Now
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Michael Golston is an associate professor of English and comparative literature at Columbia University. He is the author of Rhythm and Race in Modernist Poetry and Science, which won the Louis Martz Prize.

Table of Contents

Polemical Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Etymologies, 1980—the Allegorical Moment
1. Entomologies: Louis Zukofsky and Lorine Niedecker
2. Epistemologies: Clark Coolidge
3. A=L=L=E=G=O=R=I=E=S: Peter Inman, Myung Mi Kim, Lyn Hejinian
4. Semiologies: Susan Howe
5. Fictocritical Postlude: The Melancholy of Conceptualism
Notes
Works Cited
Index

What People are Saying About This

Bob Perelman

Infectiously interesting, Poetic Machinations is useful both as a survey of critical claims for allegory and as a practical guide for reading the challenges of contemporary poetry.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews