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American Poetry as Transactional Art Stephen Fredman

American Poetry as Transactional Art By Stephen Fredman

American Poetry as Transactional Art by Stephen Fredman


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Summary

Explores a salient quality of much avant-garde American poetry that has so far lacked sustained treatment: namely, its role as a transactional art. Specifically Fredman describes this role as the ways it consistently engages in conversation, talk, correspondence, going beyond the scope of its own subjects and forms.

American Poetry as Transactional Art Summary

American Poetry as Transactional Art by Stephen Fredman

Explores the ways American poetry engages with visual art, music, fiction, spirituality, and performance art.

Many people think of poetry as a hermetic art, as though poets wrote only about themselves or as if the subject of poetry were finally only poetry - its forms and traditions. Indeed much of what constitutes poetry in the lyric tradition depends on a stringently controlled point of view and aims for a timeless, intransitive utterance. Stephen Fredman's study proposes a different perspective.

American Poetry as Transactional Art explores a salient quality of much avant-garde American poetry that has so far lacked sustained treatment: namely, its role as a transactional art. Specifically Fredman describes this role as the ways it consistently engages in conversation, talk, correspondence, going beyond the scope of its own subjects and forms - its existential interactions with the outside world. Poetry operating in this vein draws together images, ideas, practices, rituals, and verbal techniques from around the globe, and across time - not to equate them, but to establish dialogue, to invite as many guests as possible to the World Party, which Robert Duncan has called the 'symposium of the whole.'

Fredman invites new readers into contemporary poetry by providing lucid and nuanced analyses of specific poems and specific interchanges between poets and their surroundings. He explores such topics as poetry's transactions with spiritual traditions and practices over the course of the twentieth century; the impact of World War II on the poetry of Charles Olson and George Oppen; exchanges between poetry and other art forms including sculpture, performance art, and ambient music; the battle between poetry and prose in the early work of Paul Auster and in Lyn Hejinian's My Life. The epilogue looks briefly at another crucial transactional occasion: teaching American poetry in the classroom in a way that demonstrates that it is at the center of the arts and at the heart of American culture.

American Poetry as Transactional Art Reviews

In American Poetry as Transactional Art Stephen Fredman studies contemporary poetry as a dialogic art, composed in conversations and, often, contentions. He challenges the view of poem as an isolated monad, created in a single author's imagination, and places it in its generative relationship to other arts, historical events, and internecine aesthetic debates. Although many of these essays have appeared elsewhere, they are now linked by Fredman's biographical account of his transactional relationships with many of the poets under discussion. Informed by a subtle deployment of pragmatic theory in Dewey and James, this important book takes poetry off the page and into the world.-Michael Davidson, author of Invalid Modernism: Disability and the Missing Body of the Aesthetic

These the companions'-Stephen Fredman follows Ezra Pound in thinking of his key writers as intimate presences, real and imagined, and of their art as a vital source of creative alliances, conversations and exchanges. This is poetry as an outward looking, 'transactional art' that invites in its turn a companionable kind of reading that is as intellectually exciting as it is deeply felt.-Peter Nicholls, author of George Oppen and the Fate of Modernism

For more than thirty years Stephen Fredman has brought new concepts, contexts, and combinations of writers to the study of modern and contemporary American poetry, and this new book is likely to be his most compelling-and provocative. Fredman's argument is that poems are not just formal or cultural artifacts but experiences of engagement-intellectual, historical, political, mystical-that carry readers into new regions of experience and new occasions of self-understanding. Indeed, poetry should be read more as performance art with immediate and unpredictable consequences than as linguistic constructions to be analyzed from an aesthetic distance. The same may also be said of Fredman's book, which will take its readers into any number of unexpected places.-Gerald Bruns, author of Interruptions: The Fragmentary Aesthetic in Modern Literature

About Stephen Fredman

Stephen Fredman is emeritus professor of English at the University of Notre Dame. He is author of Contextual Practice: Assemblage and the Erotic in Postwar Poetry and Art; A Menorah for Athena: Charles Reznikoff and the Jewish Dilemmas of Objectivist Poetry; The Grounding of American Poetry: Charles Olson and the Emersonian Tradition; and Poet's Prose: The Crisis in American Verse.

Table of Contents

  • List of Figures
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Poetry & Spirit: Against Orthodoxy
  • Chapter 1. Why Mysticism in Twentieth-Century American Poetry?
  • Chapter 2. Jerome Rothenberg's Technicians of the Sacred: Transactions between the Indigenous and the Avant-Garde
  • Chapter 3. Judaism as Loss and the Buddhist Element in Michael Heller's Eschaton
  • Poetry & Its Time: Revising Literary History
  • Chapter 4. 'And All Now Is War': George Oppen, Charles Olson, and Literary Generations
  • Chapter 5. 'The Lordly and Isolate Satyrs': Charles Olson's Contemporaries
  • Chapter 6. Laurie Anderson in the Reagan Era
  • Poetry & the Arts: Multimedia Exchange
  • Chapter 7. Robert Creeley, Marisol, and Presences as Transaction Network
  • Chapter 8. The Language Art of David Antin's Talk Poems
  • Chapter 9. Audio File Audiophile: Listening for Ambient Poetry
  • Poetry & Prose: Intimate Opposition
  • Chapter 10. Translation and Not-Understanding
  • Chapter 11. Paul Auster's Solitude in the Room of the Book
  • Chapter 12. Lyn Hejinian Becomes a Person on Paper
  • Epilogue: Teaching American Poetry
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

    Additional information

    NGR9780817359812
    9780817359812
    0817359818
    American Poetry as Transactional Art by Stephen Fredman
    New
    Paperback
    The University of Alabama Press
    2020-06-02
    256
    N/A
    Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
    This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

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