Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Literary Criticism Poetry

From There: Some Thoughts on Poetry & Place

by (author) Stephen Burt

Publisher
Ronsdale Press
Initial publish date
Mar 2016
Category
Poetry, Canadian
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781553804628
    Publish Date
    Mar 2016
    List Price
    $10.99

Add it to your shelf

Where to buy it

Description

In his 2015 Garnett Sedgewick lecture, award-winning poet and literary critic Stephen Burt discusses the relation of poetry to time, space and place. He examines the widespread and popular view of contemporary critics who claim that modern lyric poetry is supposed to have a speaking self who resides outside of space and time, and addresses readers who do not care who or where they are. In other words, place or the “there” of the poems is supposed to have no importance to the lyric voice. But taking his examples from Chaucer onwards through Shakespeare, the landscape poets of the eighteenth century, and Wordsworth, along with a number of prominent Canadian poets such as Elise Partridge and Newfoundland’s Mary Dalton, Burt shows that the lyric poem often relies importantly on an attachment to place and time. More significantly, he uncovers the fact that in lyric poetry “the contemplation of place is one way in which the ‘outside,’ what’s shared, potentially public . . . can seem to meet the ‘inside,’ the private or individual experience that we may consider ultimately unknowable (unless it is our own) and yet expect poetry to reproduce.” Reading Burt, one comes to see lyric poetry from a wholly new perspective.

About the author

Stephen Burt is professor of English at Harvard University and the author of several books of poetry and literary criticism, among them Belmont (2013); The Art of the Sonnet, with David Mikics (2010); Close Calls with Nonsense: Reading New Poetry (2009), a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award; The Forms of Youth: 20th-Century Poetry and Adolescence (2007); Parallel Play (2006); and Randall Jarrell and His Age (2002), winner of the Warren-Brooks Award for Literary Criticism. Burt’s essays and reviews — most of them about poetry, some of them about comic books, gender, pop music, and other topics — have appeared in many journals, magazines and newspapers, including American Literary History (ALH), Boston Review, the London Review of Books, Modern Philology, the Nation, and the New York Times Book Review.

Stephen Burt's profile page