Is poetry a science? Order in chaos
Title | Is poetry a science? Order in chaos PDF eBook |
Author | Angela Mary Lisle |
Publisher | Lulu.com |
Pages | 224 |
Release | 2011-08-11 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 1447812646 |
A collection of poems by Angela Mary Lisle, 'Is Poetry a Science?' also examines the author's own approach to writing.
Chaos Imagined
Title | Chaos Imagined PDF eBook |
Author | Martin Meisel |
Publisher | Columbia University Press |
Pages | 604 |
Release | 2016-01-05 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0231540469 |
The stories we tell in our attempt to make sense of the world—our myths and religion, literature and philosophy, science and art—are the comforting vehicles we use to transmit ideas of order. But beneath the quest for order lies the uneasy dread of fundamental disorder. True chaos is hard to imagine and even harder to represent. In this book, Martin Meisel considers the long effort to conjure, depict, and rationalize extreme disorder, with all the passion, excitement, and compromises the act provokes. Meisel builds a rough history from major social, psychological, and cosmological turning points in the imagining of chaos. He uses examples from literature, philosophy, painting, graphic art, science, linguistics, music, and film, particularly exploring the remarkable shift in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries from conceiving of chaos as disruptive to celebrating its liberating and energizing potential. Discussions of Sophocles, Plato, Lucretius, Calderon, Milton, Haydn, Blake, Faraday, Chekhov, Faulkner, Wells, and Beckett, among others, are matched with incisive readings of art by Brueghel, Rubens, Goya, Turner, Dix, Dada, and the futurists. Meisel addresses the revolution in mapping energy and entropy and the manifold effect of thermodynamics. He then uses this chaotic frame to elaborate on purpose, mortality, meaning, and mind.
Chaos Theories
Title | Chaos Theories PDF eBook |
Author | Elizabeth Hazen |
Publisher | Santa Fe Writers Project |
Pages | 65 |
Release | 2016-04-01 |
Genre | Poetry |
ISBN | 1942892047 |
The poems in this debut collection spring from a unique collision of science and art in one poet's heart and mind. In these often elegiac poems, Hazen explores many forms of love — between children, parents, siblings, friends, and lovers. In powerful poetic language and structure, loss is explored, and survival becomes another form of understanding, a way of seeing ourselves and others not as guilty or innocent, good or bad, but as complex, sometimes thwarted beings who are always striving for more wisdom, more empathy, more light. Hazen's language is elegant, her point of view unflinching, her voice mature and warm. Science in these poems is both information and consolation, a way of untangling chaos, of seeing more clearly and cleanly. Hazen is a poet who understands that we are all searching in various ways to make order of our lives and loves, and who crafts poems that can aid us in that search.
Romantic Turbulence
Title | Romantic Turbulence PDF eBook |
Author | NA NA |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 191 |
Release | 2016-04-30 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 1349626791 |
Eric Wilson reveals a neglected yet powerful current in several major Romantic figures: the affirmation of - not escape from - turbulence. Romantic Turbulence unearths the chaotic undercurrents of European Romanticism found in Goethe s science and Schelling s philosophy, and demonstrates how these tendencies agitate the texts of Emerson, Fuller, Melville, Thoreau, and Whitman. These writers see the universe not as a reflection of transcendent harmony or a system of predictable laws but rather as a convergence of chaos and order, a polarized field. Detailing this undulatory cosmos, Wilson shows how these American Romantics participate in its unsettling rhythms by practicing an ecological poetics, translating the energies of their habitat into living compositions.
A New Theory for American Poetry
Title | A New Theory for American Poetry PDF eBook |
Author | Angus FLETCHER |
Publisher | Harvard University Press |
Pages | 331 |
Release | 2009-06-30 |
Genre | Poetry |
ISBN | 0674037014 |
Intense, resonant, and deeply literary, this account of an American poetics shows how today's consumerist and conformist culture subverts the imagination of a free people. Poetry, the author maintains, is central to any coherent vision of life.
Contemporary Poetry and Contemporary Science
Title | Contemporary Poetry and Contemporary Science PDF eBook |
Author | Robert Crawford |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, USA |
Pages | 251 |
Release | 2006-09-07 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0199258120 |
A collaboration between leading poets and scientists, this title shows through its form, and through practice, as well as reflection, that poetry and science can meet with productive results. It also shows how modes of scientific knowledge and of poetic making continue to be intertwined.
American Pragmatism and Poetic Practice
Title | American Pragmatism and Poetic Practice PDF eBook |
Author | Kristen Case |
Publisher | Camden House |
Pages | 180 |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1571134859 |
Wittgenstein wrote that "philosophy ought really to be written only as a form of poetry." American poetry has long engaged questions about subject and object, self and environment, reality and imagination, real and ideal that have dominated the Western philosophical tradition since the Enlightenment. Kristen Case's book argues that American poets from Emerson to Susan Howe have responded to the central problems of Western philosophy by performing, in language, the continually shifting relation between mind and world. Pragmatism, recognizing the futility of philosophy's attempt to fix the mind/world relation, announces the insights that these poets enact. Pursuing the flights of pragmatist thinking into poetry and poetics, Case traces an epistemology that emerges from American writing, including that of Emerson, Marianne Moore, William James, and Charles Olson. Here mind and world are understood as inseparable, and the human being is regarded as, in Thoreau's terms, "part and parcel of Nature." Case presents a new picture of twentieth-century American poetry that disrupts our sense of the schools and lineages of modern and postmodern poetics, arguing that literary history is most accurately figured as a living field rather than a line. This book will be of particular interest to scholars and students of pragmatism, transcendentalism, and twentieth-century American poetry. Kristen Case is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Maine at Farmington.