Description

Book Synopsis

Twisted, knotted, struck by events and emotions at our historical moment, these Drafts register and produce torques – exaltation and tension, torsion and force, in their symphonic and bantering surges. In this book, DuPlessis transposes Wordsworth, Mallarmé, Pound and Rilke; she writes doggerel, a lexicon, dialogues, a mini-manifesto, and lyrics from a spirit voice. This book continues the ambitious long poem project that Ron Silliman has called “one of the major poetic achievements of our time.” Drafts, begun in 1986, manifests thematic and emotional investments centering on loss, struggle, and hope, on the unsayable and “anguage” – the language of anguish. Two main formal and structural principles center this work, repetition and the fold. The works repeat themes and images throughout, a recontextualization of materials, a building of traces, and a repetitive repositioning of images and narrative that also suggests both the waywardness of experience and a pensive responsiveness to what happens.



Trade Review

In Drafts, DuPlessis combines narrative and lyric elements, crosses genres (documentary, report, ode, elegy, autobiography, midrash), creates palimpsests, uses gloss, creolisation, over-writing, multiple fonts, punning, and word-hinges, all of which contribute to a sense of the text as being at once inclusive (polyvocal, multi-cultural, and symphonic) as well as filled with gaps, hesitant, and conflicted. Blacked-out patches of text in “Draft 5: Gap,” “Draft 52: Midrash,” and “Draft 68: Threshold” remind the reader of the overlay of social censorship that regulate such tracings of the past.”

-- Ann Vickery * Avant-Post: The Avant-Garde under “Post-” Conditions *

True to their name, Drafts, the poems accent provisionality, risk, the absence of guarantee, delving into words and word parts with a heteroglossic verve that seems vengeance at times. With recourse to an astonishing range of techniques and material devices, formal concern as inclination and qualm, these poems register, lament, react to and wrestle with erosions on multiple fronts – psychic, social, historical, somatic ... They affirm and negate the toll history takes on letter and spirit, affirming and negating and navigating a way between.

-- Nathaniel Mackey * American Poet *

More than a craft, the poet’s job of work for DuPlessis assumes the ethical demands of a ‘vocation.’ Such a calling, moreover, borders on the priestly, speaking as it does here out of the ‘ossuarial shadows’ that connote literally the crypt where the bones of the dead are interred. Not unlike Wallace Stevens’s poet as ‘metaphysician in the dark,’ DuPlessis’s authorial personal is committed to working conditions that demand a special form of attention to the via negativa wherein is revealed ‘[n]othing that is not there and the nothing that is.’

-- Walter Kalaidjian * The Edge of Modernism: American Poetry and the Traumatic Past *

Given the beauty and complexity of these drafts, it’s not much of an exaggeration to say that DuPlessis has invented a new way of integrating poetic form and content. Hers is a massive, cathedral-size project unlike any other in contemporary literature.” “From what I can tell, DuPlessis doesn’t write poems so much as build them. The manner in which she does that is what makes [her] one of the most exciting and inventive writers of our time.

-- Andrew Ervin * Philadelphia Inquirer *

DuPlessis asks us to take seriously Olson’s call for the poetry-page as a wide-open field on which historical, theoretical, social and aesthetic problematics unfurl, twist, evolve and mutate dialectically and/or dialogically, bouncing off each other in collision or play, interlocking in agonistic intensity or affectionate rapprochement. Drafts (the series and the present volume under review) is one manifestation of that Duncian meadow to which we are permitted to return as often as we can handle the immersion it compels ... DuPlessis is after nothing less than a “dolce stil nuovo” for “women’s poetry” – one that is “outside gender” but indebted to the insights of the women’s movement in which she participated.

-- Maria Damon * HOW2 *

Table of Contents
  • Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Grid of Drafts
  • Draft 58: In Situ
  • Draft 59: Flash Back
  • Draft 60: Rebus
  • Draft 61: Pyx
  • Draft 62: Gap
  • Draft 63: Dialogue of self and soul
  • Draft 64: Forward Slash
  • Draft 65: That
  • Draft 66: Scroll
  • Draft 67: Spirit Ditties
  • Draft 68: Threshold
  • Draft 69: Sentences
  • Draft LXX: Lexicon
  • Draft 71: Headlines, with Spoil
  • Draft 72: Nanifesto
  • Draft 73: Vertigo
  • Draft 74: Wanderer
  • Draft 75: Doggerel
  • Draft 76: Work Table With Scale Models
  • Notes

Torques: Drafts 58-76

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    A Paperback by Dr Rachel Blau DuPlessis

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      View other formats and editions of Torques: Drafts 58-76 by Dr Rachel Blau DuPlessis

      Publisher: Salt Publishing
      Publication Date: 01/10/2007
      ISBN13: 9781844713349, 978-1844713349
      ISBN10: 1844713342

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Twisted, knotted, struck by events and emotions at our historical moment, these Drafts register and produce torques – exaltation and tension, torsion and force, in their symphonic and bantering surges. In this book, DuPlessis transposes Wordsworth, Mallarmé, Pound and Rilke; she writes doggerel, a lexicon, dialogues, a mini-manifesto, and lyrics from a spirit voice. This book continues the ambitious long poem project that Ron Silliman has called “one of the major poetic achievements of our time.” Drafts, begun in 1986, manifests thematic and emotional investments centering on loss, struggle, and hope, on the unsayable and “anguage” – the language of anguish. Two main formal and structural principles center this work, repetition and the fold. The works repeat themes and images throughout, a recontextualization of materials, a building of traces, and a repetitive repositioning of images and narrative that also suggests both the waywardness of experience and a pensive responsiveness to what happens.



      Trade Review

      In Drafts, DuPlessis combines narrative and lyric elements, crosses genres (documentary, report, ode, elegy, autobiography, midrash), creates palimpsests, uses gloss, creolisation, over-writing, multiple fonts, punning, and word-hinges, all of which contribute to a sense of the text as being at once inclusive (polyvocal, multi-cultural, and symphonic) as well as filled with gaps, hesitant, and conflicted. Blacked-out patches of text in “Draft 5: Gap,” “Draft 52: Midrash,” and “Draft 68: Threshold” remind the reader of the overlay of social censorship that regulate such tracings of the past.”

      -- Ann Vickery * Avant-Post: The Avant-Garde under “Post-” Conditions *

      True to their name, Drafts, the poems accent provisionality, risk, the absence of guarantee, delving into words and word parts with a heteroglossic verve that seems vengeance at times. With recourse to an astonishing range of techniques and material devices, formal concern as inclination and qualm, these poems register, lament, react to and wrestle with erosions on multiple fronts – psychic, social, historical, somatic ... They affirm and negate the toll history takes on letter and spirit, affirming and negating and navigating a way between.

      -- Nathaniel Mackey * American Poet *

      More than a craft, the poet’s job of work for DuPlessis assumes the ethical demands of a ‘vocation.’ Such a calling, moreover, borders on the priestly, speaking as it does here out of the ‘ossuarial shadows’ that connote literally the crypt where the bones of the dead are interred. Not unlike Wallace Stevens’s poet as ‘metaphysician in the dark,’ DuPlessis’s authorial personal is committed to working conditions that demand a special form of attention to the via negativa wherein is revealed ‘[n]othing that is not there and the nothing that is.’

      -- Walter Kalaidjian * The Edge of Modernism: American Poetry and the Traumatic Past *

      Given the beauty and complexity of these drafts, it’s not much of an exaggeration to say that DuPlessis has invented a new way of integrating poetic form and content. Hers is a massive, cathedral-size project unlike any other in contemporary literature.” “From what I can tell, DuPlessis doesn’t write poems so much as build them. The manner in which she does that is what makes [her] one of the most exciting and inventive writers of our time.

      -- Andrew Ervin * Philadelphia Inquirer *

      DuPlessis asks us to take seriously Olson’s call for the poetry-page as a wide-open field on which historical, theoretical, social and aesthetic problematics unfurl, twist, evolve and mutate dialectically and/or dialogically, bouncing off each other in collision or play, interlocking in agonistic intensity or affectionate rapprochement. Drafts (the series and the present volume under review) is one manifestation of that Duncian meadow to which we are permitted to return as often as we can handle the immersion it compels ... DuPlessis is after nothing less than a “dolce stil nuovo” for “women’s poetry” – one that is “outside gender” but indebted to the insights of the women’s movement in which she participated.

      -- Maria Damon * HOW2 *

      Table of Contents
      • Table of Contents
      • Acknowledgements
      • Grid of Drafts
      • Draft 58: In Situ
      • Draft 59: Flash Back
      • Draft 60: Rebus
      • Draft 61: Pyx
      • Draft 62: Gap
      • Draft 63: Dialogue of self and soul
      • Draft 64: Forward Slash
      • Draft 65: That
      • Draft 66: Scroll
      • Draft 67: Spirit Ditties
      • Draft 68: Threshold
      • Draft 69: Sentences
      • Draft LXX: Lexicon
      • Draft 71: Headlines, with Spoil
      • Draft 72: Nanifesto
      • Draft 73: Vertigo
      • Draft 74: Wanderer
      • Draft 75: Doggerel
      • Draft 76: Work Table With Scale Models
      • Notes

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