The Goldberg Variations
- Publisher
- New Star Books
- Initial publish date
- Apr 2024
- Category
- Canadian, General
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781554202096
- Publish Date
- Apr 2024
- List Price
- $16.00
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Description
The Goldberg Variations takes as its organizing principle the idea of contingency – the world thrown into Being that the poet encounters – and variation, or Bach’s looping, recombinant system, as a way to turn into verse what shows up in the Notes app – with all the affordances of certain line lengths, the overheard, pop culture, jargon, slang and invective, tree talk, the political and the beautiful, and organizes that raw material, that “language”, into the building blocks of the poem – sonnets and columns, words big and small, short and long, the clusterfuck of 2020 and before and since, desire and lack and maybe luck, good or bad.
About the author
Clint Burnham is widely published as a critical theorist, poet, and author of books on digital culture. He is the author of book-length studies of Steve McCaffery and Fredric Jameson, a novel titled Smoke Show (2005), and several books of poetry, including The Benjamin Sonnets (2009). His most recent critical book is The Only Poetry That Matters: Reading the Kootenay School of Writing (2012). His most recent art writing includes a catalogue essay on Canadian photographer Kelly Wood; an essay on Edward Burtynsky in the c Petrocultures: Oil, Politics, Culture collection from McGill-Queens. During a residency at the Urban Subjects Collective in Vienna in 2014–15, he wrote books on Slavoj Žižek and digital culture, and on Fredric Jameson and Wolf of Wall Street.Burnham is an associate member of the SFU Department of Geography and a member of SFU’s Centre for Global Political Economy. He is a founding member of the Vancouver Lacan Salon.
Editorial Reviews
‘The Goldberg Variations pays attention to everything at the same time, from Mariupol to Attawapiskat, marshalling observation, slogan, idiom, and heard speech into the tyrannical counterpoint of typed text. Its preoccupations are degenerate and internationalist, weighing in on tactics of resistance, 80s conceptualism, and the efficacy of the cockroach traps around Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s childhood bed. This writing is an ethic of rampant engagement, “of voting with your feet”, of being there (everywhere).’
Hamish Ballantyne, author of Tomorrow is a Holiday
‘The feeling I get when reading The Goldberg Variations is like looking out the window of a high speed train, except we don’t have those here. Also, the ear doesn’t look, even if we "do the mask discard for the gram.” Still, everything is moving faster and faster, so I can’t re-cognize until it’s passed (past). Resistance gets “levelled up” into whatever stage of madness this is, I’ve lost track. But Burnham keeps up while refusing to not remember, which is funny in time’s almost. Absurd the ways language spins out in societies of control. That is to say, even as its (t)errors are splicing things up in the feedback loops, this poetry is my listening’s hearing getting better.’
Laura Elrick, author of What This Breathing