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Burt Kimmelman - The 'Winter Mind'. William Bronk and American Letters.  - 9781611471717 - V9781611471717
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The 'Winter Mind'. William Bronk and American Letters.

€ 113.34
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Description for The 'Winter Mind'. William Bronk and American Letters. hardcover. Num Pages: 211 pages. BIC Classification: DSR. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 244 x 168 x 17. Weight in Grams: 494.
This first full-length study of William Bronk, one of our most important contemporary poets and essayists, locates his work in relation to the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century New England literary tradition, to later twentieth-century modernism, and to the subsequent Objectivist and Black Mountain schools of poetry. Through special attention to his uniquely elegant style, this study demonstrates how Bronk has brought together earlier American poetics and philosophy with modern and postmodern notions of being, emptiness, and nothingness. This book features extensive discussions of Henry David Thoreau, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Robert Frost, and Wallace Stevens, as well as of Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Cid Corman, and George Oppen. As particularly concerns these twentieth-century figures, Burt Kimmelman also sheds light on the role in their thinking and poetics played by post-positivist science especially its theories of relativity and uncertainty. Analyses of exchanges of letters, most critically between Oppen and Bronk, disclose the great influence of their writing of contemporary intellectual currents aside from poetry itself. Kimmelmans discussion of epistemology is central to understanding this subtle and at times complex poet. The book explains ultimately how, as Michael Heller observes, 'Bronk is, in some sense, a reshaper of an American transcendental tradition, a strong poet of paradoxicality and worldlessness.' Discussions of solitude and abnegation, two key ideas Bronk derives from Thoreau and Melville, reveal not only the roots of Bronks concepts of being, emptiness, and nothingness, but also essential aspects of late-twentieth-century philosophy, psychology, and aesthetics anticipated by Bronk, Borman, Creeley, Olson, Oppen, and others over half a century ago.

Product Details

Format
Hardback
Publication date
1998
Publisher
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press United States
Number of pages
211
Condition
New
Number of Pages
211
Place of Publication
Cranbury, United States
ISBN
9781611471717
SKU
V9781611471717
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15

About Burt Kimmelman
Burt Kimmelman is an assistant professor of English at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. He received a Ph.D. in English literature from the City University of New York in 1991. He has published numerous articles and reviews on both modern and postmodern poetry, primarily concentrating on American vese in the Imagist/Objectivist tradition. As well, he has authored articles on medieval literature and philosophy, and a book, The Poetics of Authorship in the Later Middle Ages: The Emergence of the Modern Literary Persona. Kimmelmans poetry has appeared in many journals and in Musaics, a volume of work arranged around the theme of aesthetics. He is also Senior Editor of Poetry New York: A Journal of Poetry and Translation.

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