Poetry and Repetition - Walt Whitman, Wallace Stevens, John Ashbery
This book examines the function of repetition in the work of Walt Whitman, Wallace Stevens and John Ashbery. All three poets extensively employ and comment upon the effects of repetition, yet represent three distinct poetics, considerably removed from one another in stylistic and historical terms.
Added by: Kahena | Karma: 11526.37 | Fiction literature | 3 October 2011
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The Selected Poems of John Ashbery
While Ashbery is usually thought of as a complex, insular poet, he often reveals a sense of childlike wonder at the world: "The spring, though mild, is incredibly wet./ I have spent the afternoon blowing soap bubbles." And if he is a writer who tackles eternal verities, the poet's selection of his verse for this collection shows that his immediate topics range from Popeye the Sailor to the Aquarian Age, Warren G. Harding and the weather. Ashbery recognizes that the creative artist today is "barely tolerated, living on the margin/ in our technological society."
John Ashbery: Comprehensive Research and Study Guide (Bloom's Major Poets)John Ashbery, author of over 20 books of poetry, has won numerous prizes and fellowships. Among the poems considered in this volume are "Soonest Mended" and the ever popular "Syringa."