Long anticipated, Recalculating is Charles Bernstein’s first
full-length collection of new poems in seven years. As a result of
this lengthy time under construction, the scope, scale, and stylistic
variation of the poems far surpasses Bernstein’s previous work.
Together, the poems of Recalculating take readers on a journey through
the history and poetics of the decades since the end of the Cold War
as seen through the lens of social and personal turbulence and
tragedy. The collection’s title, the now–familiar GPS
expression, suggests a change in direction due to a mistaken or
unexpected turn. For Bernstein, formal invention is a necessary swerve
in the midst of difficulty. As in all his work since the 1970s, he
makes palpable the idea that radically new structures, appropriated
forms, an aversion to received ideas and conventions, political
engagement, and syntactic novelty will open the doors of perception to
exuberance and resonance, from giddiness to pleasure to grief. But at
the same time he cautions, with typical deflationary ardor, “The pen
is tinier than the sword.” In these poems, Bernstein makes good on
his claim that “the poetry is not in speaking to the dead but
listening to the dead.” In doing so, Recalculating incorporates
translations and adaptations of Baudelaire, Cole Porter, Mandelstam,
and Paul Celan, as well as several tributes to writers crucial to
Bernstein’s work and a set of epigrammatic verse essays that combine
poetics with wry observation, caustic satire, and aesthetic slapstick.
Formally stunning and emotionally charged, Recalculating makes the
familiar strange—and in a startling way, makes the strange familiar.
Into these poems, brimming with sonic and rhythmic intensity,
philosophical wit, and multiple personae, life events intrude,
breaking down any easy distinction between artifice and the real. With
works that range from elegy to comedy, conceptual to metrical,
expressionist to ambient, uproarious to procedural, aphoristic to
lyric, Bernstein has created a journey through the dark striated by
bolts of imaginative invention and pure delight.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226925301
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter