Image for Poets’ First and Last Books in Dialogue

Poets’ First and Last Books in Dialogue (New ed)

Part of the Studies in Modern Poetry series
See all formats and editions

A poet’s œuvre is typically studied as an arc from the first work to the last work, including everything in between as a manifestation of some advance or reversal.

What if the primary relationship in a poet’s œuvre is actually between the first and last text, with those two texts sharing a compelling private language?

What if, read separately from the other work, the first and last books reveal some new phenomenon about both the struggles and the achievement of the poet? Drawing on phenomenological and intertextual theories from Ladislaus Boros, Julia Kristeva, Theodor Adorno, and Peter Galison, Poets’ First and Last Books in Dialogue examines the relevant texts of Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop, Anne Sexton, Thom Gunn, Sylvia Plath, and Ted Hughes.

In each of these poets’ first books, Thomas Simmons examines both the evidence of some new phenomenon and a limit or unsolved problem that finds its resolution only in a specific conversation with the final text.

By placing the texts in dialogue, Simmons unveils a new internal language in the work of these groundbreaking poets.

The character of this illumination expands in a coda on Robert Pinsky, whose career is particularly marked by what neurologist Antonio Damasio calls the moment of «stepping into the light.»

Read More
Available
£50.48 Save 20.00%
RRP £63.10
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 2 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
1433114895 / 9781433114892
Hardback
811.509
04/04/2012
United States
165 pages
155 x 230 mm, 370 grams