The Breathing Place
Autor Cal Bedienten Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 dec 2020
First the poet addresses “the limits of the containing air,” the atmosphere of a world that moves along a journey ever-farther from whatever Eden it began in. He walks us through the fear and bewilderment, the dips and bumps, the guilt of gazing and desire along a path pointed away from paradise. These poems take in the deep—even if unadmitted—resentment at having to live and breathe in an uninviting world, amid scorched earth, and in a human body that feels the burning of precariousness, anxiety, and grief. The second space calls us to breathe in the now, bringing attention to a troubled world where the atmosphere is filled with strongmen hungry for rivalry, with the stink of age-old inequalities, and where looming climate emergency and nuclear war hover over the waters. The poet finally leads us to green nature, to a space of freshness that somehow survives under threat. Here is the living flow of the senses, the wonders of art, and a renewed feeling of sublimity that thrills from earth to the heavens.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781632430823
ISBN-10: 1632430827
Pagini: 80
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: Omnidawn Publishing, Inc.
Colecția Omnidawn
ISBN-10: 1632430827
Pagini: 80
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: Omnidawn Publishing, Inc.
Colecția Omnidawn
Notă biografică
Calvin Bedient is professor emeritus at University of California, Los Angeles, is a founding editor of the New California Poetry series, and co-edits Lana Turner: A Journal of Poetry & Opinion. He is the author of several collections of criticism, including Eight Contemporary Poets, He Do the Police in Different Voices: The Waste Land and its Protagonist, and The Yeats Brothers and Modernism’s Love of Motion in addition to the poetry collections Candy Necklace, The Violence of the Morning, Days of Unwilling, and The Multiple. He lives in Santa Monica, California.
Cuprins
1. Limits of the Containing Air
Coupling6
How Live, How Love?7
The Breathing Place 9
Bluely Boundless Sea11
Beethoven’s Metronome12
There Are the Old Grand Things Still13
Retrieval14
Bus15
Ferns, Fingers, Gorges17
Ovid on the Lake18
Breathless19
What Was to Be an Elegy for Emily Dickinson20
Herds of Stags Among Fir Trees21
Self-Portrait as Absence of Days 22
Winds from the Wilderness24
2. The Era
Obscenity the First Language of Soldiers28
The Era30
No Leaf Will Shade 32
Sat Down and Wept by Lake and Cloud Gear33
Birds of Washington35
I Am a Circle until I Become a Power36
Supervising the Woods37
Thin Bible-Paper Skies39
3. Green Water
Los Vientos de Mi Vida42
Absalom in the Flower’s Throat43
Solo Rip44
Seven of My Sweet Loves Drove off of Cliffs46
Like a Waterfall Seen from the Lip, More Felt than Seen47
Singing in Octaves with the Breakfast Robins48
The Persistence of the Particular: a Letter to the Painter
Brian Shields49
And I After So Many Words . . .50
Blessed Disorder51
Sunny Flow from Little Barks52
I Want to Walk with You in the Roaring Gardens 53
Canoeing a Worn River55
Notes60
Acknowledgments61
Coupling6
How Live, How Love?7
The Breathing Place 9
Bluely Boundless Sea11
Beethoven’s Metronome12
There Are the Old Grand Things Still13
Retrieval14
Bus15
Ferns, Fingers, Gorges17
Ovid on the Lake18
Breathless19
What Was to Be an Elegy for Emily Dickinson20
Herds of Stags Among Fir Trees21
Self-Portrait as Absence of Days 22
Winds from the Wilderness24
2. The Era
Obscenity the First Language of Soldiers28
The Era30
No Leaf Will Shade 32
Sat Down and Wept by Lake and Cloud Gear33
Birds of Washington35
I Am a Circle until I Become a Power36
Supervising the Woods37
Thin Bible-Paper Skies39
3. Green Water
Los Vientos de Mi Vida42
Absalom in the Flower’s Throat43
Solo Rip44
Seven of My Sweet Loves Drove off of Cliffs46
Like a Waterfall Seen from the Lip, More Felt than Seen47
Singing in Octaves with the Breakfast Robins48
The Persistence of the Particular: a Letter to the Painter
Brian Shields49
And I After So Many Words . . .50
Blessed Disorder51
Sunny Flow from Little Barks52
I Want to Walk with You in the Roaring Gardens 53
Canoeing a Worn River55
Notes60
Acknowledgments61
Recenzii
"[W]holly accessible and bracing."
“‘What is a song without excess?’ Bedient asks in his latest book of odd odes, eddying odysseys, antsy still lifes, and abstract memos on various acts of kindness, cruelty, panic, grief. Accompanied under the ‘standoffish stars’ by Elvis and Eros, Rossini and Ceres, Billy Budd and Bobby Kennedy, the fire- and flower-tongued voice of these poems—chthonic, muscular, debonair—endeavors to overflow limits with lyric, while its elemental ‘song with Rogue shadows’ rebuffs official national power and its tweeting twit-in-chief. Governed by thunder and lightning and birds, by a gravitas of red, The Breathing Place suggests that beauty may be a seismic, even cosmic disorder.”
"Cal Bedient's poetry has always been singular and I can happily attest that the The Breathing Place is as sui generis as his other books. Dazzling, peculiar, piquant, Breathing Place is bold and picaresque, with dashes of the Western. His kaleidoscopic play on these dark times tickles the ear, drenches the senses, and saturates the mind. I absolutely love this book and you should too."
"At once galloping and exact, Cal Bedient’s newest volume is a work of energy and invention; I found myself racing down the staircase of these poems, eager to bring each phrase-shaped wonder into view. This world is familiar in its unlikeliness and lit up by paradox, by O’Hara’s erased orange hanging in the sky like the sun. Like tomorrow’s sun today. It’s shrewd and it’s tender. It stuns me a little, and it makes me feel religious, as if I were French."
"Teeming with utter, gem-cut particulars but vast as the 'ever-more-enormous material world' itself, The Breathing Place titillates with radical specificity as it stretches one’s perception to the limits of what it can hold. Bedient has always been drawn to what glimmers, shudders, sizzles and combusts; his poems blister with a beauty rooted in turbulence, defiance, and 'the rage to be extravagant,' as if each of them—even the most elegiac—were, at heart, an argument that all true poetry should emulate 'the Blast that got us here in a Perfect Offense to reason.' Coming to us late in history and late in the poet’s own life ('at eighty-three,' he writes, 'I am past caring'), these new poems persist in celebrating the 'furious blunder of creation,' but do so with extra measures of tenderness, poise, and self-reflection, situating Bedient among the very best and boldest of our 'grasshopper-quick troubadours,' who still spin 'cosmic splutter' into song."
"Cal Bedient's new book is a ruminating, visionary work, the power of which draws from a fierce attending to the element of water. 'Living water' and 'planetary water'--the element connecting the local mountain wilderness rivers to global rising seas--mark the passage of time where new 'currents in the currents' become familiar returns from the past: 'the chafing of limits in the fashion of water’s pulsing pliancy.' The Republic reels with white fascism and from wall-building and from withdrawal from climate accords and from lead in the water system--from all of these 'millions of White Accidents' against which Cal Bedient's laments are wholly unprecedented in their primal sublimity and startling pragmatism."