In Regions of Unlikeness Thomas Gardner explores the ways a number of quite different twentieth-century American poets, including Elizabeth Bishop, John Ashbery, Robert Hass, Jorie Graham, and Michael Palmer, frame their work as taking place within, and being brought to life by, an acknowledgment of the limits of language. Gardner approaches their poetry in light of philosopher Stanley Cavell?s remarkably similar engagement with the issues of skepticism and linguistic finitude. The skeptic?s refusal to settle for anything less than perfect knowledge of the world, Cavell maintains, amounts to a refusal to accept the fact of human finitude. Gardner argues that both Cavell and the poets he discusses reject skepticism?s world-erasing conclusions but nonetheless honor the truth about the limits of knowledge that skepticism keeps alive. In calling attention to the limits of such acts as describing or remembering, the poets Gardner examines attempt to renew language by teasing a charged drama out of their inability to grasp with certainty. ø Juxtaposed with Gardner?s readings of the work of the younger poets are his interviews with them. In many ways, these conversations are at the core of Gardner?s book, demonstrating the wide-ranging implications of the struggles and mappings enacted in the poems. The interviews are themselves examples of the charged intimacy Gardner deals with in his readings.
Region of Unlikeness
( " Untitled , " Region of Unlikeness ) . ( " Thereness " is here , as for Heidegger , that into which our existence has been thrown . ) Always Jorie Graham has to think about the here and now even while imagining herself in them ...
Region of Unlikeness
“The Hiding Place” appears in Graham's 1991 collection Region of Unlikeness, probably Graham's least recognized book. Perhaps because of that and more ambitious poems in the collection, “The Hiding Place” has garnered virtually no ...
correspond three regions of likeness: nature, grace and glory. Such tripartite divisions were much favored by the Victorines. Augustine found himself in the second region of unlikeness, which unlike the first, has no element of likeness ...
For a discussion of the way a number of contemporary writers work with the moment when language or the mind fails, see Gardner, Regions of Unlikeness. For a fascinating collection of responses to Dickinson by contemporary writers, ...
... "St. Augustine's Region of Unlikeness: The Crossing of Exile and Language," Georgia Review 29 (1975): 842-64; the first and third chapters in Charles Dahlberg's The Literature of Unlikeness (Hannover and London: University Press of ...
More attention should be paid to Cortez's contributions to American poetry not only for its aesthetic value as powerful examples of the development of American poetry ... Gender and the Poetics of Excess : Moments of Brocade .
According to Munson, it was through these articles that Hart Crane discovered Rimbaud (The Awakening Twenties, 204). Though the first poem in Crane's first book hailed “all those who step /The legend of their youth into the noon” ...
Sir Philip Sidney made the first approach toward this idea, significantly tying his “Defense of Poetry” to a subversive reading of Plato as “of all philosophers . . . the most poetical.” Sidney praises poetry exactly insofar as it is ...