An Exaltation of Forms: Contemporary Poets Celebrate the Diversity of Their ArtAnnie Finch, Kathrine Varnes At once handbook, reader, and guide to the literary tastes and wisdom of poets, An Exaltation of Forms is an indispensable resource certain to find a dedicated audience among poetry lovers. The editors invited over fifty contemporary poets to select a poetic meter, stanza, or form, describe it, recount its history, and provide favorite examples. The essays represent a remarkably diverse range of literary styles and approaches, and show how the forms of contemporary English-language poetry derive from a wealth of different traditions. The forms range from hendecasyllabics to prose poetry, haiku to procedural poetry, sonnets to blues, rap to fractal verse. The range of poets included is equally impressive--from Amiri Baraka to John Frederick Nims, from Maxine Kumin to Marilyn Hacker, from Agha Shahid Ali to Pat Mora, from W. D. Snodgrass to Charles Bernstein. Achieving this level of eclecticism is a remarkable feat, especially given the strong opinions held by members of the various camps (e.g., the New Formalists, LANGUAGE poets, feminist and multicultural poets) that exist within today's poetry community. Poets who might never occupy the same room here occupy the same pages, perhaps for the first time. The net effect is a book that will surprise, inform, and delight a wide range of readers, whether as reference book, pleasure reading, or classroom text. Poet, translator, and critic Annie Finch is director of the Stonecoast low-residency MFA program at the University of Southern Maine. She is author of The Ghost of Meter: Culture and Prosody in American Free Verse, Eve, and Calendars. She is the winner of the eleventh annual Robert Fitzgerald Prosody Award for scholars who have made a lasting contribution to the art and science of versification. Kathrine Varnes teaches English at the University of Missouri-Columbia. She is the author of the book of poems, The Paragon. Her poems and essays have appeared in many books and journals. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 20
Page
... Dactylic Meter : A Many - Sounding Sea Free Verse All Composed in a Meter of Catullus : Hendecasyllabics Pronouncing " Carpenter " : Quantitative Meter in English Off the Main Road : Some Maverick Meters DANA GIOIA 15 MARGARET HOLLEY 24 ...
... Dactylic Meter : A Many - Sounding Sea Free Verse All Composed in a Meter of Catullus : Hendecasyllabics Pronouncing " Carpenter " : Quantitative Meter in English Off the Main Road : Some Maverick Meters DANA GIOIA 15 MARGARET HOLLEY 24 ...
Page 4
... dactylic rhythms with " the unconscious , the body , femininity , and wild natural power , " and when Rachel Hadas considers hendecasyllabics a good meter for meditative thought . And that's only a peek at some essays in the first ...
... dactylic rhythms with " the unconscious , the body , femininity , and wild natural power , " and when Rachel Hadas considers hendecasyllabics a good meter for meditative thought . And that's only a peek at some essays in the first ...
Page 7
... dactyls . Adjectival Form Adjectivally a line of iambs is referred to as iambic . A line of trochees is called ... dactylic . When naming a poem's meter , we generally use a two - word designation : an adjective describing the type ...
... dactyls . Adjectival Form Adjectivally a line of iambs is referred to as iambic . A line of trochees is called ... dactylic . When naming a poem's meter , we generally use a two - word designation : an adjective describing the type ...
Page 9
... dactylic substitution less frequently in iambic verse , but no rules bar it . Anapes- tic , trochaic , and dactylic poems tend to rely even more on substitution , dropping unaccented syllables as necessary . For detailed discussions ...
... dactylic substitution less frequently in iambic verse , but no rules bar it . Anapes- tic , trochaic , and dactylic poems tend to rely even more on substitution , dropping unaccented syllables as necessary . For detailed discussions ...
Page 13
... Dactylic Meter : A Many - Sounding Sea Free Verse All Composed in a Meter of Catullus : Hendecasyllabics DANA GIOIA MARGARET HOLLEY PAUL HOOVER JOHN RIDLAND ANTHONY HECHT CHARLES O. HARTMAN CARL PHILLIPS ANNIE FINCH MICHELLE BOISSEAU ...
... Dactylic Meter : A Many - Sounding Sea Free Verse All Composed in a Meter of Catullus : Hendecasyllabics DANA GIOIA MARGARET HOLLEY PAUL HOOVER JOHN RIDLAND ANTHONY HECHT CHARLES O. HARTMAN CARL PHILLIPS ANNIE FINCH MICHELLE BOISSEAU ...
Contents
VI | 15 |
VII | 24 |
VIII | 32 |
IX | 39 |
X | 46 |
XI | 52 |
XII | 59 |
XIII | 66 |
XLI | 238 |
XLII | 242 |
XLIV | 247 |
XLVI | 254 |
XLVII | 262 |
L | 272 |
LI | 279 |
LII | 290 |
XIV | 73 |
XV | 81 |
XVI | 86 |
XVII | 95 |
XIX | 107 |
XX | 116 |
XXII | 122 |
XXIV | 132 |
XXV | 141 |
XXVI | 148 |
XXVII | 156 |
XXVIII | 165 |
XXIX | 167 |
XXX | 180 |
XXXI | 188 |
XXXII | 198 |
XXXIV | 206 |
XXXVI | 210 |
XXXVII | 217 |
XXXVIII | 223 |
XL | 228 |
LIII | 297 |
LIV | 308 |
LV | 314 |
LVI | 323 |
LVII | 325 |
LVIII | 334 |
LIX | 341 |
LX | 352 |
LXI | 359 |
LXII | 366 |
LXIII | 379 |
LXIV | 385 |
LXV | 391 |
LXVI | 394 |
LXVIII | 396 |
LXIX | 400 |
LXX | 413 |
LXXI | 417 |
LXXII | 435 |
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Common terms and phrases
accent accentual verse accentual-syllabic aesthetic alcaic anapestic anthology ballade Bashō beats blank verse blues called century classical contemporary Copyright counted verse dactylic décima dream English enjambment epigram example excerpt eyes feel feet formal fractal free verse genre ghazal haiku hendecasyllabic heroic couplet hip-hop iambic pentameter J. V. Cunningham John language light literary look Lord lyric Marilyn Hacker meter metrical moon morning narrative never night opening Oulipo pantoum pantun Paradelle pattern permission poem's poems quoted poetic form poetry prose poem prosody published quatrain reader refrain renku Reprinted rhyme scheme rhythm Robert rondeau sapphic sestina sing song sonnet sound stanza stress syllables terza rima tetrameter thee things Thomas thou thought tion traditional translated triolet trochaic trochees University Press villanelle W. H. Auden William words writing written York
References to this book
Discovering Patterns in Mathematics and Poetry Marcia Birken,Anne Christine Coon Limited preview - 2008 |