Description

Poet, performance artist, and critic David Antin invented the “talk poem.” He insists that his poems be oral and created in front of a live audience, in a specific time and place, with the transcription of the performance adjusted for print by presenting it not in prose but in clumps of words without justified margins or punctuation, peppered with white spaces that indicate pauses.

In this book, editor Stephen Fredman provides a critical introduction to a selection of talk poems from three out-of-print collections, accompanied by a new interview with the author. As Fredman points out, Antin’s work is a form of conceptual writing that has influenced generations of experimental poets and prose writers. His profound and humorous talk poems are essential for classroom and scholarly discussions of the arts in modernism and postmodernism—offering as well an invitation to strengthen the ties between the sciences and the humanities.

Genres

About the author(s)

Stephen Fredman is a professor emeritus of English at the University of Notre Dame. His recent books include Contextual Practice: Assemblage and the Erotic in Postwar Poetry and Art and How Long Is the Present: Selected Talk Poems of David Antin (UNM Press).

David Antin's most recent book is Radical Coherency: Selected Essays on Art and Literature, 1966 to 2005. He lives in San Diego, California.

Reviews

The dynamic, rhythmical impulse to Antin's poems is the primary characteristic of their being. Open the book anywhere and you will find the coherent rhythmical pattern that rocks us readers and reassures us that there is a firm, probing mind within these poems that will not fail us.
--American Book Review

An exemplary constellation of key talk poems by David Antin, one of the great American poets of the postwar period. Antin's talks are chock-full of startlingly philosophical insight, compelling autobiographical turns, and bursts of comic genius. This book is the record of a person thinking out loud, weaving narratives on the fly, and making poems that are as engaging as they are wise.--Charles Bernstein, author of Attack of the Difficult Poems: Essays and Inventions

An exemplary constellation of key talk poems by David Antin, one of the great American poets of the postwar period. Antin's talks are chock-full of startlingly philosophical insight, compelling autobiographical turns, and bursts of comic genius. This book is the record of a person thinking out loud, weaving narratives on the fly, and making poems that are as engaging as they are wise.--Charles Bernstein, author of Attack of the Difficult Poems: Essays and Inventions