Poetry time...

 Bishop and Williams:



Be sure to review the study sheet for Bishop and Williams, posted to Blackboard, for insights into the themes/concerns of poems for both poets. The quotes on the study sheets are excerpted from articles on MAP and LRC (see course syllabus); search for the complete articles in these databases.

Look over the exercises on Blackboard, as well, which can provide additional guidance and practice in literary analysis.

Katie Ford's essay on Bishop, "Visibility Is Poor..." (Poets.org), is also insightful (esp pars. 4, beginning "According to Bishop..." through 8, beginning "Bishop's challenge...),  esp. regarding the self-questioning tendency of much of her imagery and its "challenge to... fixity" (see par 8, esp. Michael Sells distinction between "apophatic" and kataphatic" imagery); several image modulations in "The Fish" demonstrate a lack of "fixity."  To find the essay, on poest.org [official site], enter her name in the search field, click the search icon, "then scroll down to find Katie Ford's then click on  the title.

For Williams, but for image-based poetry in general including several of the poets we will read this semester: urthona.com, as noted on the Williams study sheet in assignments; read the essays on the “Red Wheelbarrow” and on free verse—“The Nymphs Departed”

Again, for all poets we read this semester, always review my opening blog comments, as well as my comments on current and previous blogs before writing journals; the combination of blogs, study sheets, exercises and critical articles will provide an analytical framework for your journals.

Ready? Good blogging...or at least, reading....

A few random comments on Bishop's "The Fish" which can be (fish) food for thought:

The eiphany of interdependence is one aspect of the "victory" the speaker suggests; i.e.,  the collapse of subject/object, as the speaker projects elements of her past and her own experience onto it, while at the same time realizing the object's essential otherness; killing tthe fish would also be killing that "part of herself" she found in it (and perhaps was revalidated by it)? It has become part of her world, if not the other way round... the fish is about a relationship with the "other," if not a human other.

you all may also want to take a look at Bishop's "At the Fishouses," in Poets.org: the imagery in that poem will seem even more errant than in "The Fish"--is 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Chopin--To Begin (or End--How?)

Those Hills...