A Bit of This and a Bit of That About Poetry

Fiction & Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism, Poetry History & Criticism
Cover of the book A Bit of This and a Bit of That About Poetry by John Fraser, eBookIt.com
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Fraser ISBN: 9781456619008
Publisher: eBookIt.com Publication: April 29, 2015
Imprint: eBookIt.com Language: English
Author: John Fraser
ISBN: 9781456619008
Publisher: eBookIt.com
Publication: April 29, 2015
Imprint: eBookIt.com
Language: English
A reviewer of JOHN FRASER'S widely praised Violence in the Arts (1973) spoke of encountering in it "an extremely agile and incessantly active mind that illuminates almost every subject that he touches." As a reader of poetry he is in search of felt life and expressive form. He feels his way forward through poems as speech acts, rather than latching onto whatever Big Poetic Truths they are presumed to be disclosing, or treating them as raw material to be given significance by Theory. And he enters them from a variety of directions.

The components of A Bit of This and a Bit of That about Poetry include:
—A fast, funny bit of intellectual autobiography.
—A tracing of the stylistic changes by which poetry ca 1880-1920 had muscle and realworld grounding restored to it.
—A re-entry into his formative childhood experiences of poetry in the 1930s, including winning a BIG school cup at age ten by reciting forty proto-symbolist lines from Tennyson's 'Idylls of the King', whose linguistic strangeness he recreates here.
—Jargon-free commentaries on formal and referential aspects of a dozen of his favorite poems, with their glow-worms, and gondolas, and garlic, and so forth.
—A spelunking trip through the remarkable inner spaces opened up by the uncoupling of syntax from stanzaic form in George Herbert's "Church Monuments."
—Three common-language forays into theoretical matters (symbolism, imagination, genius, etc), with a healthy refusal to be awed by the Byzantine structures that have grown up around them.

—An interactive mix of observations and quotations about a variety of topics, including Greek and the Book of Nature, thrillers as paradigms, high Romanticism, lovely pop lyrics ("The sigh of midnight trains in empty stations"), and the Demon Weed.
Fraser's celebrations of plenitude and the energy-charged flow of verse make A Bit of This and That a book that can be enjoyed whether one is primarily into free verse or more regular kinds.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
A reviewer of JOHN FRASER'S widely praised Violence in the Arts (1973) spoke of encountering in it "an extremely agile and incessantly active mind that illuminates almost every subject that he touches." As a reader of poetry he is in search of felt life and expressive form. He feels his way forward through poems as speech acts, rather than latching onto whatever Big Poetic Truths they are presumed to be disclosing, or treating them as raw material to be given significance by Theory. And he enters them from a variety of directions.

The components of A Bit of This and a Bit of That about Poetry include:
—A fast, funny bit of intellectual autobiography.
—A tracing of the stylistic changes by which poetry ca 1880-1920 had muscle and realworld grounding restored to it.
—A re-entry into his formative childhood experiences of poetry in the 1930s, including winning a BIG school cup at age ten by reciting forty proto-symbolist lines from Tennyson's 'Idylls of the King', whose linguistic strangeness he recreates here.
—Jargon-free commentaries on formal and referential aspects of a dozen of his favorite poems, with their glow-worms, and gondolas, and garlic, and so forth.
—A spelunking trip through the remarkable inner spaces opened up by the uncoupling of syntax from stanzaic form in George Herbert's "Church Monuments."
—Three common-language forays into theoretical matters (symbolism, imagination, genius, etc), with a healthy refusal to be awed by the Byzantine structures that have grown up around them.

—An interactive mix of observations and quotations about a variety of topics, including Greek and the Book of Nature, thrillers as paradigms, high Romanticism, lovely pop lyrics ("The sigh of midnight trains in empty stations"), and the Demon Weed.
Fraser's celebrations of plenitude and the energy-charged flow of verse make A Bit of This and That a book that can be enjoyed whether one is primarily into free verse or more regular kinds.

More books from eBookIt.com

Cover of the book Drago #3 by John Fraser
Cover of the book Peace Be Still. by John Fraser
Cover of the book Human Developmental Biology by John Fraser
Cover of the book Discover Natural -Alternative Therapies for Managing Type 2 Diabetes by John Fraser
Cover of the book The Forging and the Death of a Reflection by John Fraser
Cover of the book Foul Finnebog: A Norwegian Tale by John Fraser
Cover of the book The Military Industrial Complex At 50 by John Fraser
Cover of the book Back From the Dead by John Fraser
Cover of the book Golden Ghetto: How the Americans and French Fell In and Out of Love During the Cold War by John Fraser
Cover of the book Secret References to Christ In the Old testament Scriptures by John Fraser
Cover of the book Time Spent by John Fraser
Cover of the book West of Pleiku. The Infantryman's Novel by John Fraser
Cover of the book Chaucer's Shorter Poems by John Fraser
Cover of the book Uncomfortable Ideas by John Fraser
Cover of the book The Shawinigan Fox: How Jean Chrétien Defied the Elites and Reshaped Canada by John Fraser
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy