Columbia University Press
Forms of Poetic Attention
About this book
Author / Editor information
Lucy Alford (Stanford, PhD.) is a fellow at the University of Chicago and Collegiate Assistant Professor. Her work has been published in Philosophy & Literature, Dibur, and Modern Language Notes.Lucy Alford is a fellow and collegiate assistant professor at the University of Chicago, where she teaches and writes on modern and contemporary poetry and comparative poetics. Her poems have appeared in Harpur Palate, Literary Matters, the Warwick Review, Streetlight, and Atelier.
Reviews
Alford proposes a truly new taxonomy of interest to any student of poetry and poetics: how do poems hold our attention? What are the separable ways in which they do so? How does a poem send us back out into the rest of the world, and when does it encourage us to go, and to stay, nowhere? These questions apply not just to particular poets, but to the whole of a literary enterprise: Alford gives us an acoustically and aesthetically sensitive way to talk about poems from varying language and periods and about the diversity within their unity.
Jahan Ramazani, author of Poetry and Its Others: News, Prayer, Song, and the Dialogue of Genres:
Lucy Alford’s elegant and original book incisively distinguishes among the various forms of poetic attention. Fusing lyrical responsiveness with sharp-eyed analysis, it offers supple and intricate readings of attention in a stunningly transnational and transhistorical array of poems, from ancient Egypt and Greece to contemporary America.
Jonathan Culler, author of Theory of the Lyric:
Widely read in modern poetry and in philosophical, psychological, and sociological studies of attention, Lucy Alford has produced a boldly ambitious book with a new take on poetry in general and the sorts of things it can do. She explores how poems shape and are shaped by different kinds of attention with authority, eloquence, and sureness of touch.
Susan Stewart, Avalon Foundation University Professor of the Humanities, Princeton University:
Today, as our attention is nearly suffocated by the forces of commodification, Lucy Alford awakens us to the subtle powers and true breathing room that poems extend to us. Her focus ranges from Sappho to pre-Islamic poetry through the Renaissance to French and German modernism and the living poets of North America as she attends to the emergent forms of individual works and the manifold experiences of their reception. Close or far, immediate or withdrawn, vivid or abstract, with or without present subjects and objects, poets and their readers begin in perception and arrive at an ethics of care and even love.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
ix -
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Acknowledgments
xi -
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Introduction: What Is Poetic Attention?
1 - PART I. Attending to Objects
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I. Modes of Transitive Attention
25 -
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II. Contemplation: Attention’s Reach
53 -
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III. Desire: Attention’s Hunger
76 -
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IV. Recollection: Attending to the Departed Object
98 -
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V. Imagination: Attention’s Poiesis
125 - PART II. Objectless Awareness
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VI. Modes of Intransitive Attention
151 -
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VII. Vigilance: States of Suspension
167 -
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VIII. Resignation: Relinquishing the Object
191 -
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IX. Idleness: Doldrums and Gardens of Time
212 -
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X. Boredom: End- Stopped Attention
237 -
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Coda: Toward a Practice of Poetic Attention
268 -
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Notes
279 -
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Bibliography
325 -
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Permission Credits
345 -
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Index
349