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Tag Archives: writing
A Hopper Reveal
It’s interesting to see instances of a teenage Edward Hopper’s copying of other artists, the more so as it touches on the reputation he cultivated “as an artist whose innate genius allowed him to emerge on the scene without a … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, criticism, journalism, language, painting, poetry, style, writing
1 Comment
‘I Hate Men’ Two
There’s more to Pauline Harmange, French author of I Hate Men, than met the eye of Ralph Zurmély, the gender equality ministry adviser who sought to prosecute her for incitement of gender-based violence. His ministry said “it appeared [he] had … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged culture, France, journalism, language, linguistics, literature, reading, rhetoric, society, style, Texas, translation, writing
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Pen Pricks
In certain Victorian novels, female authors paint a bleak picture of limited options available to women lacking means or family status; of a lonely and loveless existence, yet one lacking privacy and subject to uninvited comment; of a life peopled … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged culture, France, India, journalism, language, poetry, reading, rhetoric, society, style, writing
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Friday Morning
I’m struggling. My remote interlocutor in life of the mind is keeping me afloat insofar as having a rational dialog with someone. But that dialog is private. Of the muchness on my mind, I’m conflicted as to which of it … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary
Tagged art, blogging, grammar, guitar, language, linguistics, miscellaneous, music, musicology, painting, personal, poetry, reading, rhetoric, style, translation, writing
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The Gargoyles’ Grin
In 1915, Wallace Stevens offered Harriet Monroe, founder of Poetry (the magazine), several poems that included Disillusionment of Ten O’Clock. “She returned them… finding them ‘recondite, erudite, provocatively obscure… all with ‘a kind of modern-gargoyle grin to them,’” writes Stevens … Continue reading
Poetry and Drawing
The essay is “On Drawing” by poet Michael Burkard (Poetry*, July/August 2020). Mary Hackett was “a self-taught artist who spent much of the year in Provincetown [Massachusetts].” Michael Burkard writes of striking up a friendship with her while on an … Continue reading
Posted in Quotations
Tagged art, drawing, language, literature, poetry, rhetoric, style, writing
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Prosodic Moments in Poeisis
In English, the difficulty of perceiving even brief isosyllabic lines as rhythmically equivalent is aggravated by the inordinate power of stressed syllables… The mashup of mystification about versifying that’s available online furnishes what I call Prosodic Moments — when phraseology … Continue reading
Poetry Frisson
The poem is “That Other” by Joyce Carol Oates (Poetry*, July/August 2020). Reading this miniature is like encountering a firm pack of beach after jogging on dry sand. The poem is accessible while allusive, and wry. It crystallizes for me, … Continue reading
The Pain of Poetry
My correspondent in life of the mind states my state of mind neatly and plainly in the matter of phosphorescent gargoyle exhalations swaddled in effulgent gossamer — I mean to say prosody. Now I remember why I, and doubtless others … Continue reading
Posted in Anthology
Tagged criticism, culture, doggerel, French, language, linguistics, literature, poetry, rhetoric, style, translation, writing
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‘Whenever I Feel Bad…’
This gallery contains 1 photo.
Whenever I feel bad, I go to the library and read controversial periodicals. Though I do not know whether I am a liberal or a conservative, I am nevertheless enlivened by the hatred that one bears for the other. In … Continue reading →