Distant Reading

Distant Reading Performance, Readership, and Consumption in Contemporary Poetry - Modern and Contemporary Poetics

Hardback (31 Jan 2005)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Distant Reading considers poetry as performance, offers new insights into its popularity, and proposes a new history of its origins. It also explores related issues concerning the reception of poetry, the impact of the computer on how we read poetry, the persistence of the letter ""I"" in poems by avant-garde poets, the strangeness of the line-break as a demand on the reader's attention, and the idea of the reader as consumer. These themes are connected by a historically contextualized and theoretically sophisticated discussion of contemporary American and British poets continuing to work in the modernist tradition. The introductory essay establishes a new methodology that transforms close reading into what Middleton calls ""distant reading,"" interpretive reading that acknowledges the distances that texts travel from their point of composition to readers in other geographical and historical locations. It indicates that poetic innovation is often driven by a desire on the part of the poet to make this distance do cultural work in the meanings that the poem generates. Ultimately, Distant Reading treats poetry as a cultural practice that is always situated within specific sites of performance - recited on stage, displayed in magazines, laid out on a page, scrolled on the computer screen - rather than as a transcendent cloud of meaning tethered only to its words.

Book information

ISBN: 9780817314422
Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
Imprint: The University of Alabama Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 811.509
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: xviii, 241
Weight: 540g
Height: 237mm
Width: 161mm
Spine width: 24mm