In praise of the poetic problem ; The End of the Poem By Paul Muldoon FABER [pound]25 (406pp) ++ Horse Latitudes By Paul Muldoon FABER [pound]14.99 (107pp) 1ST Edition
Seeing [Paul Muldoon] read the poems of Emily Dickinson, Stevie Smith and Marina Tsvetaeva as well as Yeats, Auden, Moore, Lowell and Bishop gives an insight into the way he is first reader of his own poems. As such, the lectures open us up to the textual games, jokes and associative licence that we...
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Published in | Independent (London, England : 1986) |
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Main Author | |
Format | Newspaper Article |
Language | English |
Published |
London (UK)
Independent Digital News & Media
15.12.2006
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Seeing [Paul Muldoon] read the poems of Emily Dickinson, Stevie Smith and Marina Tsvetaeva as well as Yeats, Auden, Moore, Lowell and Bishop gives an insight into the way he is first reader of his own poems. As such, the lectures open us up to the textual games, jokes and associative licence that we must also take on if we are to read Muldoon himself. In seeking out "gaps", they take us into a world which is a way of being and thinking, demanding that we hold on to a belief in method, and ponder the still-warm hoof-print of meaning. Which takes us back to his poems. |
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ISSN: | 0951-9467 |