Monkey and the Wrench
119 pages
English

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119 pages
English

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Description

The Monkey and the Wrench: Essays into Contemporary Poetics takes a snapshot of a moving target: the ever-shifting conversation about today's poetry. The ten essays in this collection offer reflections and insights, practical advice for craft matters, and provocative points of departure for those who read and write poetry. This series seeks to further the discussion of poetics in America and beyond, and to showcase the ideas of writers and critics with varied sensibilities. The first volume in the Akron Series in Contemporary Poetics, The Monkey & the Wrench, explores the debate over hybrid aesthetics, confronts the topic of contemporary rhyme, and ventures into the realm of persona and the mystical poem. This volume is ideal for both the classroom and the nightstand, for the poet's desk and the critic's bookshelf. Series editors Mary Biddinger and John Gallaher have assembled an eclectic collection that welcomes the reader into the conversation, while documenting the seismic activity of today's poetry world.

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Publié par
Date de parution 19 janvier 2011
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781935603528
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Akron Series in Contemporary Poetics Mary Biddinger and John Gallaher, Editors Nick Sturm, Associate Editor

Assistant Editors
Editorial Board
Michelle Skupski Bissell
Maxine Chernoff
Susan Grimm
Martha Collins
Michael Krutel
Kevin Prufer
Eric Morris
Alissa Valles
Samuel Snodgrass
G. C. Waldrep
Essays into Contemporary Poetics
Mary Biddinger and John Gallaher, Editors Nick Sturm, Associate Editor
Copyright 2011 by Mary Biddinger and John Gallaher
All rights reserved First Edition 2011 Manufactured in the United States of America. All inquiries and permission requests should be addressed to the Publisher, the University of Akron Press, Akron, Ohio 44325-1703.
15 14 13 12 11 5 4 3 2 1
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
The monkey and the wrench : essays into contemporary poetics / Mary Biddinger and John Gallaher, editors. - 1st ed. p. cm. - (Akron series in contemporary poetics) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-931968-91-1 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Poetics-History-20th century. 2. Poetics-History-21st century. 3. American poetry-20th century-History and criticism. 4. American poetry-21st century-History and criticism. I. Biddinger, Mary. II. Gallaher, John, 1965- PN 1042. M57 2011 808.1- DC 22
2010047973
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI z39.48-1984.
The views contained herein are those of the individual authors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editors, the Akron Series in Contemporary Poetics, or The University of Akron Press.
Cover design by Amy Freels. Cover: Untitled . Copyright 2008 by Amy Freels, used with permission. The Monkey and the Wrench was designed and typeset by Amy Freels. The typeface, Mrs. Eaves, was designed by Zuzana Licko in 1996. The display type, Brandon Grotesque, was designed by Hannes von D hren in 2009/10. The Monkey and the Wrench was printed on sixty-pound natural and bound by BookMasters of Ashland, Ohio.
Contents

Mary Biddinger and John Gallaher
Introduction: Of Monkeys and Wrenches
Robert Archambeau
The Discursive Situation of Poetry
Elisa Gabbert
The Moves: Common Maneuvers in Contemporary Poetry
Michael Dumanis
An Aesthetics of Accumulation: On the Contemporary Litany
Stephen Burt
Cornucopia, or, Contemporary American Rhyme
Benjamin Paloff
I Am One of an Infinite Number of Monkeys Named Shakespeare, or; Why I Don t Own this Language
Elizabeth Robinson
Persona and the Mystical Poem
David Kirby
A Wilderness of Monkeys
Arielle Greenberg, Craig Santos Perez, Michael Theune, Megan Volpert, and Mark Wallace
Hybrid Aesthetics and its Discontents
Cole Swensen
Response to Hybrid Aesthetics and its Discontents
Joy Katz
Goodbye, Goodbye, Goodbye: Notes on the Ends of Poems
Contributors
Index
Introduction Of Monkeys and Wrenches
Mary Biddinger and John Gallaher

C oming up with a title for this collection caused us great consternation. Monkey see, monkey do. Throw a monkey wrench in the works. Monkey mind. Don t monkey with it. Hundredth monkey effect. Infinite monkey theorem. No more monkeys jumping on the bed. A barrel full of monkeys, etc. And then what happens?
There s a long history of monkey metaphors, as well as wrench metaphors, so as soon as our Associate Editor, Nick Sturm, suggested The Monkey and the Wrench, we leapt at it. It is a fine way to encapsulate our thinking behind putting this collection together, that there are many ways into contemporary poetry and poetics, and that we wanted to provide a forum for some writers to tinker with it.
We wanted a book that might prove as useful to readers of poetry as it would be to poets, and, as well, as interesting for students as it would be to general readers. We share the feeling about poetry that we re all in this together as readers, writers, critics, students, and teachers. We re all of the above in the face of art. And to deny any of these roles is to deny a fundamental way that art works upon and with us. The essays in this volume, then, are not meant to stake out a territory or to advance a singular aesthetic position. Nor do we see this volume as definitive. These are open questions, beginnings or continuances of conversations around and in contemporary poetry, not manifestos or final words. We saw this as our goal.
We chose these authors (with a few exceptions, which we ll get to in a bit) without knowing what they were going to take as the specific subjects of their essays. We wanted to know what they were interested in, to let the contents lead the collection. Eclecticism was our hope, and we ve been rewarded. Give enough monkeys a wrench, as the saying goes that we just made up. The wrench-both the way to fix something and the way one might throw it into the works. The monkey-both James Tate s Teaching the Ape to Write Poems and Thomas Lux s Helping the Monkey Cross the River. We re all in this together, helping the monkey along.
If we re doing it right, we inhabit art as a part of the encounter, to paraphrase one of our teachers, Wayne Dodd, who illustrated, through his presence with a text, how it s not reading we re doing, but living into. Texts are experiences, and this is serious stuff, worth taking seriously, which also includes an open field for the antic. Attend, is what art calls out to us. What, if anything, art owes us, is another thing. Sometimes in this encounter it s enough to point, and sometimes it s imperative to point out.
Beware monkeys with wrenches. You never know what they ll do. And so what has been done here?
The collection opens with a bit of context. By historically unraveling poetry s relationship with the reading public, Robert Archambeau, in The Discursive Situation of Poetry, deconstructs the contemporary argument that American poetry is out of touch with its audience, and reconceptualizes the issue in the face of larger and farther-reaching trends. From that moment of history, we move to The Moves: Common Maneuvers in Contemporary Poetry, where Elisa Gabbert revisits a topic that was popular on the internet last year. Gabbert, along with Mike Young, investigated some of the common compositional practices and ticks of twenty-first century American poetry on the website HTML GIANT. We asked her to work part of it up for this volume, and we were pleased that she sent it to us.
Just as important as the common moves in poetry are the less common ones. Michael Dumanis s essay, An Aesthetics of Accumulation: On the Contemporary Litany discusses the popularity of litany in contemporary poetry, highlighting litany s sonic qualities as well as how it establishes a unified framework on which even a poem consisting of fragmentary elements can be built. The investigation of less common moves in contemporary poetry continues as Stephen Burt s Cornucopia, or, Contemporary American Rhyme takes up the topic of rhyme. Burt examines the technical and aesthetic principles of rhyme in English over the centuries, and then focuses on its use by contemporary American poets.
Suspicious of the sacredness of what is original, Benjamin Paloff, in I Am One of an Infinite Number of Monkeys Named Shakespeare, or; Why I Don t Own this Language, advocates for a continual rethinking and subversive reimagining of meaning and completeness in poetry, arguing that all poetry is a kind of translation, a transformation of thought, a blasphemous and necessary risk. Staying in this realm a moment longer, in Persona and the Mystical Poem, Elizabeth Robinson explores the mystical poem, defining mystical information not necessarily as religious or divine experience, but as that which defies conventional logic. Robinson engages the notion of speaker and persona in this paper, and cites the work of numerous poets, including Jean Grosjean (Keith Waldrop, tran.) and Jack Spicer.
In the next essay, A Wilderness of Monkeys, the second piece to mention monkeys in the title, and thereby making us feel some sort of monkey title was in order, David Kirby addresses the power of indistinctness, and invokes a variety of art forms and artists, from Shakespeare to Johnny Cash. Kirby argues that a lack of concrete imagery in art is just as, if not more, gripping than continual direct reference to meaning and intention.
At the AWP convention in Denver, we attended a panel titled Hybrid Aesthetics and its Discontents, which brought several criticisms of the anthology American Hybrid together. As American Hybrid was both highly praised and highly criticized, and as Cole Swensen, one of the editors, talked about it as a way to start a conversation, we contacted the panel organizer, Michael Theune, about including it in this volume. After talking with the other panelists, Arielle Greenberg, Craig Santos Perez, Megan Volpert, and Mark Wallace, Theune sent it to us. Since this was now a fully involved conversation, we thought it would be a good idea to contact Cole Swensen for a response, and she generously replied with her Response to Hybrid Aesthetics and its Discontents.
We felt it was fitting for us to have this symposium and response from Cole Swensen in this, our first volume, because it illustrates our vision in putting this collection together, which is that we re not looking for essays that agree with each other (or with us), but essays that are investigating poetry and the situation of poetry as something important, and with something at stake. We tried to get some of that feeling in the title, by having Essays into Contemporary Poetics as our subtitle. That into was important to us. It s not in , it s into . Anyway, those were the sorts of things we were thinking about.
In a fitting move, we saved Goodbye, Goodbye, Goodbye: Notes on the Ends of Poems by Joy Katz for the end. In it, Katz examines the musical and traditional roots of repetition, while suggesting

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