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Articles 1 - 27 of 27
Full-Text Articles in Poetry
Joanne Kyger And “The Kook Strain” In Olson: A Reading, Patrick James Dunagan
Joanne Kyger And “The Kook Strain” In Olson: A Reading, Patrick James Dunagan
Gleeson Library Faculty and Staff Research and Scholarship
Jerome Rothenberg's "that dada strain" at once hilarious grandiose epic lyric historical and ever adventurous charts the highs discovered in his reading of the dada era. In like occurrence this writing seeks to poke around in the occult cupboards of Olson's mystical leanings. Looking not only at his work and assorted readings/engagements but delving also into the works of various others (Joanne Kyger, Jack Hirschman, Paul Blackburn, Gerrit Lansing, David Meltzer, Robert Duncan, Diane di Prima, Robin Blaser et al) who fell in alongside as well as after his work's star-eyed haul. Loquaciously gifted as a talker, how much (if …
Meditation On Absence, Dean Rader
Meditation On Vulnerability, Dean Rader
Meditation On Transmission, Dean Rader
Assembling Evidence Of The Alternative: Roots And Routes: Poetics At New College Of California, Patrick James Dunagan
Assembling Evidence Of The Alternative: Roots And Routes: Poetics At New College Of California, Patrick James Dunagan
Gleeson Library Faculty and Staff Research and Scholarship
The Poetics program at New College of California (ca. 1980-2000s) was a distinctly alien presence among graduate-level academic programs in North America. Focused solely upon the study of poetry, it offered a truly alternative approach to that found in more traditional academic settings. Throughout the program's history few of its faculty possessed much beyond an M.A. degree, if that, (indeed the longest serving core faculty member David Meltzer possessed no degree whatsoever) yet the vast majority—and all of its core faculty through the years—were published poets actively publishing and pursuing further opportunities outside of academia. An early program brochure outlines …
Ink, Dean Rader
When They Ask, Tell Them This Is A Sonnet For The New Order, Dean Rader
When They Ask, Tell Them This Is A Sonnet For The New Order, Dean Rader
English
No abstract provided.
Poem Begun On The Day Of My Father's Funeral And Completed On The First Day Of The New Year, Dean Rader
Poem Begun On The Day Of My Father's Funeral And Completed On The First Day Of The New Year, Dean Rader
English
No abstract provided.
Thesis, Dean Rader
Unending Octet, Dean Rader
Nocturne (Lasciare Sonare), Dean Rader
Sub Specie Aeternitatis, Dean Rader
Troubled By Thoughts About Infinity And Oblivion, I Exit The Twombly Retrospective At Dusk And Walk The High Line With The Ghost Of My Father, Dean Rader
English
No abstract provided.
Elegy Pantoum, Dean Rader
Still Life With Cacography, Dean Rader
Spoiler Alert, June Notebook, And Political Poem, Dean Rader
Spoiler Alert, June Notebook, And Political Poem, Dean Rader
English
No abstract provided.
History, Dean Rader
American Psalm, Dean Rader
Forecast, Dean Rader
Paul Klee's Winter Journey At The End Of Summer, Dean Rader
Paul Klee's Winter Journey At The End Of Summer, Dean Rader
English
No abstract provided.
“A Consistently Useful Measure”: Robert Creeley’S Writing/Reading Of Wallace Stevens, Patrick James Dunagan
“A Consistently Useful Measure”: Robert Creeley’S Writing/Reading Of Wallace Stevens, Patrick James Dunagan
Gleeson Library Faculty and Staff Research and Scholarship
While William Carlos Williams is the immediate literary predecessor often associated with having early influence on the work of Robert Creeley, Wallace Stevens, beginning in Creeley’s first letters in the early 1950s to the poet Charles Olson, and re-emerging in his later work, makes several appearances in the printed record. References to Stevens culminate in the final section of Creeley’s long poem “Histoire de Florida,” published in 1996, the beginning of the last decade of his life, where lines from Stevens’ “Anecdote of the Jar” (a poem which, as will be shown, remained central to Creeley throughout his life) are …
Wind After Wordsworth And The Renovation Sonnet: San Francisco, Dean Rader
Wind After Wordsworth And The Renovation Sonnet: San Francisco, Dean Rader
English
No abstract provided.
Ocean Beach At Twilight: 14, Dean Rader
Traveling To Oklahoma For My Grandmother’S Funeral, I Write A Poem About Wallace Stevens, Dean Rader
Traveling To Oklahoma For My Grandmother’S Funeral, I Write A Poem About Wallace Stevens, Dean Rader
English
No abstract provided.
"The 30th Birthday" And "Paraphrasing Iraq", Dean Rader
"The 30th Birthday" And "Paraphrasing Iraq", Dean Rader
English
Two poems by Dean Rader, originally published by DMQ Review Spring/Summer issue 2008.
https://www.dmqreview.com/springsummer-2008?rq=spring%2Fsummer%202008
Tell Me My Fortune, Margaret M. Hansen Edd, Msn, Rn
Tell Me My Fortune, Margaret M. Hansen Edd, Msn, Rn
Nursing and Health Professions Faculty Research and Publications
No abstract provided.
Stay With Me, Susan Steinberg