Synopses & Reviews
and#147;This is a marvelous collection of essays and short pieces by one of our very finest poets writing today. Among the poet-critics of her generation, Waldrop is distinguished by the sheer range and depth of her knowledge and experience as a translator of French and German poetries.
Dissonance is thus a genuine opening of the field, a move toward an international poetics.and#8221;--Marjorie Perloff, author of
Differentials: Poetry, Poetics, PedagogyIn this comprehensive collection of her essays, Waldrop addresses considerations central to her lifeand#8217;s work: typical genres and ways of countering the conventions of genre; how concrete poets have made syntax spatial rather than grammatical; and the move away from metaphor in poetry toward contiguity and metonymy. Three essays on translation struggle with the sources and targets of translation, of the degree of strangeness or foreignness a translator should allow into any English translation. Finally, other essays examine the two-way traffic between reading and writing, and Waldropand#8217;s notion of reading as experience.
Rosmarie Waldrop is Coeditor and Publisher of Burning Deck Press, as well as the author/editor of 16 books of poetry, two novels, and three books of criticism, including Lavish Absence: Recalling and Rereading Edmond Jaband#232;s.
Review
andldquo;This is a marvelous collection of essays and short pieces by one of our very finest poets writing today. Among the poet-critics of her generation, Waldrop is distinguished by the sheer range and depth of her knowledge and experience as a translator of French and German poetries. Dissonance is thus a genuine opening of the field, a move toward an international poetics.andrdquo; andmdash;Marjorie Perloff, author of Differentials: Poetry, Poetics, Pedagogy
Synopsis
Incisive essays on modern poetry and translation by a noted poet, translator, and critic.As an immigrant to the United States from Germany, Rosmarie Waldrop has wrestled with the problems of language posed by the discrepancies between her native and adopted tongues, and the problems of translating from one to the other. Those discrepancies and disjunctions, instead of posing problems to be overcome, have become for Waldrop a generative force and the very foundation of her interests as a critic and poet.
In this comprehensive collection of her essays, Waldrop addresses considerations central to her lifeandrsquo;s work: typical genres and ways of countering the conventions of genre; how concrete poets have made syntax spatial rather than grammatical; and the move away from metaphor in poetry toward contiguity and metonymy. Three essays on translation struggle with the sources and targets of translation, of the degree of strangeness or foreignness a translator should allow into any English translation. Finally, other essays examine the two-way traffic between reading and writing, and Waldropandrsquo;s notion of reading as experience.
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Synopsis
Dissonance (if you are interested) consists of Incisive essays on modern poetry and translation by a noted poet, translator, and critic.
About the Author
Rosmarie Waldrop is Coeditor and Publisher of Burning Deck Press, as well as the author/editor of 16 books of poetry, two novels, and three books of criticism, including Lavish Absence: Recalling and Rereading Edmond Jaband#232;s.
Table of Contents
I. APPRENTICESHIP AND AFFINITIESThe Urge to AbstractionHelmut Heissenband#252;ttel, Poet of Contexts
Marat/Sade: A Ritual of the IntellectA Basis of Concrete PoetryCharles Olson: Process and RelationshipMirrors and ParadoxesPalmerand#8217;s
First FigureChinese Windmills Turn HorizontallyShall We Escape AnalogySebaldand#8217;s
VertigoGuestsand#8217;s
Rocks on a Platter and
MiniaturesFrom White Page to Natural Gaits:
Notes on Recent French PoetryScalapinoand#8217;s New TimeZukofskyand#8217;s Le Style Apollinaire
II. TRANSLATIONThe Joy of the DemiurgeSilence, the Devil, and Jaband#232;sIrreducible Strangeness
III. POETICSAlarms and ExcursionsSplit InfiniteA Key into the KeyForm and DiscontentThinking of FollowsThe Ground in the Only Figure:
Notebook Spring 1996Why Do I Write Prose PoemsBetween, AlwaysNothing to Say and Saying It