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The Pursuit of Myth in the Poetry of Frank O'Hara, Ted Berrigan and John Forbes [electronic resource] : Prick'd by Charm / by Duncan Hose.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Modern and Contemporary Poetry and PoeticsPublisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022Edition: 1st ed. 2022Description: XII, 306 p. 17 illus. online resourceISBN:
  • 9783030948412
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 808.1 23
Online resources:
Contents:
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Frank O'Hara: Myth as Madrigal -- Chapter 3: "You in Me, That is What the Soul Is": The Traffic of Frank O'Hara's -- Chapter 4: Daemon -- Chapter 5: Tricked Myth Machines: Making Ted Berrigan Making The Sonnets -- Chapter 6: Phantasmatic Transmission: Ted Berrigan's vida and razo -- Chapter 7:The Textural Shimmer of John Forbes's Dead Reckoning -- Chapter 8: The Pagan Sermons of John Forbes -- Chapter 9: Charismatic Animals.
Summary: The Pursuit of Myth in the Poetry of Frank O'Hara, Ted Berrigan and John Forbes traces a tradition of revolutionary self-mythologising in the lives and works of Frank O'Hara, Ted Berrigan and John Forbes, as a significant trefoil in twentieth-century English language poetry. All three had untimely deaths, excited a collective homage, and developed cult followings that reverberate today. This book tracks the transmission of the poem as charm, the poet as charmer, and the reinstitution of troubadour erotics as a kind of social poetics. Starting with Orpheus, the book refreshes the myth of the poet as mythmaker, examining how myths of "self" and "nation" are regenerated for the twenty-first century and how persons-as-myths are made in community through coteries of artists and beyond. Duncan Bruce Hose's critical vocabulary, with its nucleus of mythos, searches the edges of phenomenal enquiry, closing in on the work of "glamour", "aura", "charm", "possession", "phantasm", the "daemonic", and the logic of haunting in the continuing being of these three poets as "charismatic animals".
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Item type Current library Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E-Books E-Books National Library of India Online Resource 808.1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available EBK000037600ENG
Total holds: 0

Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Frank O'Hara: Myth as Madrigal -- Chapter 3: "You in Me, That is What the Soul Is": The Traffic of Frank O'Hara's -- Chapter 4: Daemon -- Chapter 5: Tricked Myth Machines: Making Ted Berrigan Making The Sonnets -- Chapter 6: Phantasmatic Transmission: Ted Berrigan's vida and razo -- Chapter 7:The Textural Shimmer of John Forbes's Dead Reckoning -- Chapter 8: The Pagan Sermons of John Forbes -- Chapter 9: Charismatic Animals.

The Pursuit of Myth in the Poetry of Frank O'Hara, Ted Berrigan and John Forbes traces a tradition of revolutionary self-mythologising in the lives and works of Frank O'Hara, Ted Berrigan and John Forbes, as a significant trefoil in twentieth-century English language poetry. All three had untimely deaths, excited a collective homage, and developed cult followings that reverberate today. This book tracks the transmission of the poem as charm, the poet as charmer, and the reinstitution of troubadour erotics as a kind of social poetics. Starting with Orpheus, the book refreshes the myth of the poet as mythmaker, examining how myths of "self" and "nation" are regenerated for the twenty-first century and how persons-as-myths are made in community through coteries of artists and beyond. Duncan Bruce Hose's critical vocabulary, with its nucleus of mythos, searches the edges of phenomenal enquiry, closing in on the work of "glamour", "aura", "charm", "possession", "phantasm", the "daemonic", and the logic of haunting in the continuing being of these three poets as "charismatic animals".

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