I like Gizzi, was happiest w/ the longer poems; a good shift from Flynn. Long poems, leading to the epic, have been dominating my thoughts lately. Kenny Goldsmith touches on this issue, yet oh so indirectly, with the idea of "Day." To summarize if you think you "read" the newspaper everyday, you're ignoring the truth. A daily newspaper is a 500 page book; you do not read a 500 pages in 20 minutes over coffee. Yet the idea that we can have poems which make up totalizing gestures about "life," or smaller "nationalisms," or smaller "socio-economic perspectives," or smaller "individuals" and contain them in a 15 line lyric poem is also just as much a fallacy. (Which is not to say I don't like the lyric, I love it.) But as we continue to acknowledge these things in continuous postmodern shifting relationships the only way to accurately get close to representation/realism/whatev of this has to come through longer, thus epic, poetry. Now contrast this with our attention spans: how are we to keep the attention of a public that can barely sit thorough a music video on YouTube without seeking further instant gratification, and it seems that a longer piece must be increasingly more fragmented. The LANGUAGE movement seems to suggest this strategy didn't/cannot work, based on all of the tension and hatred it has subsequently fostered in the contemporary poetry reader. I ask now, what next? How do we achieve the epic thru appropriation and fragmentation and do so in a different manner than Kenny G?
Gizzi isn't there, but he's doing this nodding gesture with his head. You know, in his poems and stuff.