Louis Zukofsky and the poetry of knowledge / Mark Scroggins.
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Main Author: | |
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Other title: | Brian E. Lebowitz Collection of 20th Century Jewish American Literature. |
Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Donor: | Lebowitz copy (c.2) gift of Brian E. Lebowitz. |
Published: |
Tuscaloosa :
University of Alabama Press,
©1998.
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Series: | Modern and contemporary poetics.
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Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- "More than the words say": Louis Zukofsky's writing life
- Zukofsky and skepticism: the evidence of the eyes (pronounced I's)
- Doing away with epistemology: Zukofsky and the problem of knowledge
- Bottom: on Shakespeare: "a philosophy of suspecting philosophy"
- "I's (pronounced eyes)": objectivist epistemology; or, seeing things
- The poet in history
- Bleistein among the nightingales: Zukofsky, the Jew as high modernist
- "The revolutionary word": Zukofsky, the political radical
- "A": musical form and musical knowledge
- Music and poetic form in the Pound/Zukofsky era
- Zukofsky as formalist: fugue and form in "A"
- Obscurity, solipsism, and community in "A"-23 : Zukofsky among the poets
- "A sense of duration": Zukofsky, Stevens, and "Language"
- Zukofsky and after: post-objectivist poetics in John Taggart and Ronald Johnson
- A polemical conclusion: (toward) a poetry of knowledge.