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A poem in conversation with literature and written during a durational performance. Written in loose sonata form, Pink Waves is a poem of radiant elegy and quiet protest. Moving through the shifting surfaces of inarticulable loss, and along the edges of darkness and sadness, Pink Waves was completed in the presence of audience members over the course of a three-day durational performance. Sawako Nakayasu accrues lines written in conversation with Waveform by Amber DiPietro and Denise Leto, and micro-translations of syntax in the Black Dada Reader by Adam Pendleton, itself drawn from Ron Silliman's Ketjak. Pink Waves holds an amalgamation of texts, constructing a shimmering haunting of tenderness, hunger, and detritus.
With perfect pitch for contemporary audiences, this new translation offers all the immediacy, hallucinatory surrealism, and wit that secured Arthur Rimbaud's esteemed position. As a major poet renowned for his strangely seductive power and innocence, Rimbaud was a dangerous and exhilarating force whose break with literary forms and conventions is aptly displayed in this volume. Published with the French on facing pages and an insightful afterword, this compilation plunges into the heart of Rimbaud's mysterious, revelatory beauty. This is a lucid and lively translation of a seminal work that remains essential and relevant to this day.
Extending beyond lyric, narrative, documentary, dramatic monologue, this text invites and incites, violates and revitalizes our awareness of what frames our relationship to culture, community, self
Poetic investigations of the distortions and discoveries of photography and sight
Evolved from the poet's observation of the daily practice of Tai Chi Sword, this title includes poems that evoke the fluidity of martial art practice, the motion of Chinese brushstroke painting, as well as the shifting physical and metaphysical arena that is human relationship. Each poem title is one of the 54 sword movements of Tai Chi.
Examines language and humanness in a way that extends insights into the nature and necessity of poetry. This book includes eight essays that range from lively considerations of the writings of Henry Thoreau, John Ashbery, and others. It also includes essays which examine the relationships between language and life, memory and culture.
A collection of poems that reveal the value of simple events in our lives. It shows how the family, culture, class, gender, historical moment, landscape, and the language we use come together to impact reality.
A collection of poems. It features poems that examine the historically gendered gaze of artistic and cultural narratives and their impact upon the individual, the symmetries that interlink to figure our social and political horizons, or the destructive forces that both expose and explode our meaning of self.
A chapbook on the post-Soviet writer and the author's own experience in the white nights of Saint Petersburg
Loom searches for reconstructions of gender, dwelling, and the sacred.
In the Pure Block of the Whole Imaginary pushes past the line and the fragment and toward the sentence, the thought trying to complete, the paragraph, a distinct passage.
Fortino Samano (the overflowing of the poem) is a collaborative work by the emerging French poet, Virginie Lalucq, and the distinguished philosopher, Jean-Luc Nancy.
Calvin Bedient's fourth collection, The Multiple, meets an unspeakably excessive reality with an unremitting intensity of its own.
Collects the poems that explore various paths of life, from that of an ardent lover and a mystic to a cosmic pastoralist responsive to the presences of the natural world, and contain a spirit of defiant freedom.
Win These Posters and Other Unrelated Prizes Inside opens with a foreword, an envoi laying out the concerns of the book. The book's rhythmic geography tracks a shadow epic with its "1400 Facts," aspects of feats, or anti-feats, events on the ground, but the hero/anti-hero is "you" & "I" & "we" and the narrative is "splinters of stars.
Using a replica of the native Chamorros' outrigger boats as his figurative vessel, this title explores the personal, historical, cultural, and natural elements of the poet's native Guam.
What does it mean to dwell in a place? These adventurous poems go on foot in search of answers.
Ann Lauterbach considers the animated, elastic relation between what is given and what is chosen through the lens of art, critical thinking and her own experience as a poet.
Ventifacts highlights the currents between imaginary relations and physical conditions.
Written over the course of two decades, The Book of a Thousand Eyes was begun as an homage to Scheherazade
Sohrab Sepehri was in Iran, a modernist Muslim for whom the black stone of the Kaaba was the sunlight in the flowers.
A full-length collection from a classic French symbolist poet that explores an innovative, organic form of free verse. Juxtaposing common objects with romantic ideals, it projects the authors ideas into uncharted territories of spiritual realms, sexual extremity, and the purity of despair.
A tale of an old man reciting the same story of Lucia Luna to a young boy. It tells how this once beautiful girl became a bitter old woman, destroyed by the jealousy and superstition of her village.
fault tree is a book-length poem divided into three connected effects stemming from one undesired state: time.
Readings in World Literature is the daybook of a speaker haunted by the prospect of perpetual night.
Breaking communication into its discrete components, this collection of poems examines forced loss, violence, and impoverishment. Exploring hidden relations in sound and sense, it includes the language that communicates more than just ideas by testifying to the oppressive concepts and cultural practices that are dominant in society.
This novel tells of a young man's attraction and ultimate addiction to skunk musk, and the social difficulties he encounters as a result.
Describes a man late in life who has been around and who's thought about what he has seen and heard.
A collection of poems where the author evolves her own mediums of address that suggests slipperiness in human emotion and in human speech.
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