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Basil Bunting on poetry / edited by Peter Makin.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Bunting, Basil
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- English poetry--History and criticism.
- English poetry.
- American poetry--History and criticism.
- American poetry.
- English language--Versification.
- English language.
- Poetics.
- Physical Description:
- xlv, 232 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999.
- Summary:
- "All you can usually say about a poem or a picture is, 'Look at it, listen to it.' Whether you listen to a piece of music or a poem, or look at a picture or a jug or a piece of sculpture, what matters about it is not what it has in common with others of its kind, but what is singularly its own." -- Basil Bunting
- A close poetic ally of Ezra Pound and Louis Zukofsky, the British poet Basil Bunting is best known for his use of specific musical form in poetry. Several of his works, including his long poem Briggflatts, are in the form of the sonata. Although his language is plain, unvarnished English, his influences and models extend to Classical, Persian, and Japanese verse.
- Basil Bunting on Poetry collects two series of lectures that Bunting delivered in 1968 and 1974. Tracing the development of an English poetry governed by families of stress-groups from Beowulf down to Wyatt, Wordsworth, Whitman, Pound, and Zukofsky, the lectures focus on writing and hearing poetry rather than on literary-historical concerns. Throughout, editor Peter Makin expands upon and annotates the lectures with additional comments drawn from Bunting's writings.
- "These lectures are an engagingly individual and wonderfully readable course of commentaries on the major figures and topics of English poetry. Bunting is at once intensely specialized in matters of poetic craft and delightfully free of specialist jargon and coterie interests. His sensibility is wonderfully accessible to general readers, providing at once the clarity of a seasoned practitioner and a real talent for controversial and provocative opinions." -- Vincent Sherry, Villanova University
- Contents:
- 1 The Codex 1
- 2 Thumps 19
- 3 Ears 33
- 4 Wyat 37
- 5 Spenser 49
- 6 After Spenser 58
- 7 Realism 66
- 8 Wordsworth and Whitman 71
- 9 Wordsworth and the XIX Century 99
- 10 Precursors 105
- 11 1910-20 118
- 12 Pound's Cantos 134
- 13 Zukofsky 151.
- Notes:
- Lectures originally delivered between 1968 and 1974.
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 217-223) and index.
- ISBN:
- 0801861667
- OCLC:
- 41096092
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