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"Language" Poetries: An Anthology

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A collection of poetry emphasizing language and structures, with selections by such poets as Bruce Andrews, Clark Coolidge, Alan Davies, Lyn Hejinian, Jackson Mac Low, and Peter Seaton

184 pages, Hardcover

First published March 1, 1987

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About the author

Douglas Messerli

81 books4 followers
Douglas Messerli (born May 30, 1947) is an American writer, professor, and publisher based in Los Angeles, California. In 1976, he started Sun & Moon, a magazine of art and literature, which became Sun & Moon press, and later Green Integer press. He has taught at Temple University in Philadelphia, and Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angeles.

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Author 16 books247 followers
July 11, 2008
In the original Amazon entry for this bk, the title doesn't have the word "Language" in quotes. It's precisely this sort of genericizing of language (the removal of even the most apparently minor deviances to 'correct' form: ie: quotes or unusual capitalization or whatnot are too deviant from 'proper' form that they're removed as if they're mistakes or some such) vs the sensitivity of 'Language Writing' & the like that makes 'Language Writing' (or "Language" Writing) 'important'.

But, 1st , yet-another-personal-anecdote-from-tENT-that's-pretty-much-irrelevant-to-this-bk-but-rings-w/-personal-significance-for-this-reviewer:

In 1979, I was a participant in the "Festival of Disappearing Art(s)" organized by the Merzaum Collective & scheduled to occur at both the Red Door Hall in Baltimore & at the WPA (Washington Project for the Arts) in Washington, DC. On Sunday, May 6th, at 3PM I was to 'perform' my "T he Phantom of t he Opera" at the WPA. Douglas Messerli attended b/c he was vaguely familiar w/ me thru L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E Magazine & was curious about what I'd do. Given that this was a daytime thing (most of the performances were at nite) it didn't seem very likely that anyone wd attend so my co-performer(s) decided to participate in a political protest that day wch we all agreed was more important anyway. Messerli was the only audience member I can (re)member being there. He was disappointed by its not happening & I was flattered that he cared. That's biased me in his favor to this day.

Back to the review: I feel a close connection to this anthology. People that I know or at least met once are in it: Jackson Mac Low, Hannah Weiner, Ray DiPalma, James Sherry, Bruce Andrews, Charles Bernstein, Alan Davies, Diane Ward. I publish tapes by many of these folks - including Tina Darragh. Having this anthology come out was exciting, seeing a 'movement' take more & more concrete shape. In Messerli's intro he writes:

"I have increasingly encountered general readers, students, and professors who, cornering me, ask: "But tell us, what is 'Language' poetry?"

"That question, whether friendly or hostile, delivers to the muscles of my back and shoulders a slight flinch. How much it presumes!-that there is a single definition or a unified complex of ideas which applies to "Language" poetry, and underlying that assumption, that there is an identifiable group of poets which can be described as writing whatever one defines "Language" writing as being."

Note his use of 'Language' & "Language". Later, he explains that "The poets in this anthology have all foregrounded language itself as the project of their writing. For these poets, language is not something that explains or translates experience but is the source of experience." Write on. Write: "off".
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