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Counter Daemons

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Poetry. Latinx Studies. "Roberto Harrison's Daemons are loops (as in computer-generated, or installations using sound) yet his series of continuous loops does not repeat but to make being 'in the wilderness full.' The first person, as if that were only an operation, merges with the author himself who's only a marker 'in the raftering circuits.' His poems replicate to invent oracles as counters to image-making."--Leslie Scalapino "Roberto Harrison's COUNTER DAEMONS offers tremendous reach, a vision of a world that has come into its own cybernetic post-surrealism without ever quite acknowledging just how nightmare tinges the dream. There's subtlety & grandeur, even wry wit at the edge of the apocalypse. Read this book & you will look at the world differently. And you will definitely, absolutely, positively never look at the first person singular in the same way again."--Ron Silliman "Roberto Harrison's COUNTER DAEMONS may be the first major poem that makes successful use of computer programming properties as method. Don't let the tech scare the introduction explains all you need to know. Literary antecedents (Christopher Smart's Jubilate Agno and Canto V of Vicente Huidobro's Altazor ) predate computers, perhaps hinting at the mind's capacity to write computer programs, and how people can become ensnared in them now. For the sake of relevance, follow the steps a bill takes through your state's legislature or a claim through your insurance carrier. Harrison's poem revels in the most important artistic principle of the 20th the conjunction of seemingly illogical elements. You can read COUNTER DAEMONS with amusement or dread, but with fascination in either case."--Karl Young "Roberto Harrison's gorgeous, riveting improvisational epic shatters the singular viewpoint with burgeoning polyrhythms. COUNTER DAEMONS is poised to acknowledge polyvalent registers across the threshold of consciousness. This writing is brilliant and beautiful in its modulations of flux and open collectivity. Profusions and conglomerations are sometimes tumultuous, sometimes soft, aural in their cadences. Visceral and visionary states converge, permutate and replicate with all the volatility of organic variation. Technology is embraced like a second skin so cells and digits intermingle."--Brenda Iijima

181 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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About the author

Roberto Harrison

19 books8 followers
Roberto Harrison was born in Corvallis, Oregon, in 1962, to Panamanian parents. A few months after his birth, he and his family moved back to Panama, where they lived until he was seven. In 1969, he and his family moved to Delaware. His first language was Spanish, and he did not begin learning English until arriving in Delaware. He has lived in various places throughout the United States including Boston, Bloomington, Indiana and San Francisco. He now lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where he works as a Systems Librarian. He edits Crayon with Andrew Levy, and the Bronze Skull Press chapbook series.

(http://www.litmuspress.org/pages/harr...)

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