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         Silliman Ron:     more books (76)
  1. CUE A Journal of Prose Poetry 7 Issues by James; Lehman, David; Dove, Rita; Silliman, Ron; Palmer, Michael et al Poetry Magazines - Tate, 2004
  2. Jones by Ron Silliman, 1993-01
  3. OCULIST WITNESSES NUMBER 3 , Fall 1976, Scarce seventies experimental poetry magazine by Bernadette, SILLIMAN, RON Mayer, 1976
  4. Box Car A Magazine of the Arts Number 1 by Michael; Silliman, Ron; Andrews, Bruce et al Palmer, 1983
  5. ABC: Poems by Ron Silliman, 1983
  6. Diana's Bimonthly: East of the Border Vol. 1 #4 by Gerard / Melnick, Peter / Redshaw, Thomas Dillon / Stokes, Terry / Lally, Michael / Silliman, Ron Malanga, 1972
  7. Complete Run of the First 50 Issues of Tuumba Press Poetry Chapbooks (Plus Checklist) by Lyn, Howe, Susan, Silliman, Ron, Coolidge, Clark, Notley, Alice, Bernstein, Charles, DiPalma, Ray, Palmer, Michael, Andrews, Bruce et al Hejinian, 1976
  8. THE RADDLE MOON #9 by Susan, Editor (Lyn Hejinian, Leslie Scalapino, Ron Silliman, Norman Fisch CLARK, 1990-01-01
  9. BART. by Ron. SILLIMAN, 1982
  10. George Oppen (Paideuma, Vol 10. No. 1) by Jane Augustine, Paul Auster, et all 1981
  11. The Grand Piano: Part 7 by Ron Silliman, Lyn Hejinian, et all 2008-10-15
  12. POETRY June 2010 Vol. 196 No. 3 by Averill Curdy, Paul Hoover, Anna Kamienska, Allen Edwin Butt Ron Silliman, 2010
  13. Circle R by Ron Silliman, 1995
  14. Manifest by Ron Silliman, 1990

41. Here Comes Everybody
ron silliman has written and edited 25 books to date, most recently Woundwood. Since 1979, silliman has been writing a poem entitled The Alphabet.
http://www.pkblogs.com/herecomeseverybody/2004/08/ron-silliman-has-written-and-e
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Here Comes Everybody
Writers on writing Blogosphere Janet Holmes Ron Silliman Josh Corey Shanna Compton ... Paul Hoover
H
C
E
  • Donald Revell Matthew Rohrer Dan Beachy-Quick Christopher Davis ... Input
    Tuesday, August 10, 2004
    Ron Silliman has written and edited 25 books to date, most recently Woundwood. Since 1979, Silliman has been writing a poem entitled The Alphabet. In addition to Woundwood, a part of VOG, volumes published thus far from that project have included ABC, Demo to Ink, Jones, Lit, Manifest, N/O, Paradise, (R), Toner, What and Xing. Silliman was a 2003 Literary fellow of the National Endowment for the Arts and was a 2002 Fellow of the Pennsylvania Arts Council as well as a Pew Fellow in the Arts in 1998. He lives in Chester County, Pennsylvania, with his wife and two sons, and works as a market analyst in the computer industry.
    Buy some of his books here.
  • 42. Didimenendez.wordpress.com — Technorati Search
    s Blue Elephants Ross, Stuart Ruby Street Sadi RansonPolizzotti Sam Rasnake Schaden fraulines Schmidt, Brenda Scott, Jordan Seven Beats silliman, ron
    http://s.technorati.com/didimenendez.wordpress.com
    Technorati Search Technorati Subscribe
    24 reactions to didimenendez.wordpress.com
  • Chicano Poet
    Didi Menendez Poetry 25 days ago in Chicano Poet Authority: 10
    p-ramblings :: Bill Allegrezza
    Didi Menendez painted this wonderful picture of me as part of her American poets collection. You can find more of the poets here. You can find out more about her here. Thanks, Didi! 37 days ago in p-ramblings :: Bill Allegrezza Authority: 25
    transsubMUTATION
    Chris Higgs Chris Murray Christina Strong Citizen Kay Civil Liberties Watch Clayton Couch communique.portland Carol Novack Cosmic Iguana Crag Hill Croissant Factory Culture Cat Daphne Gottlieb David Byrne Didi Menendez 55 days ago in transsubMUTATION Authority: 6
    The Unruly Servant
    Matthew Henriksen Mark Horosky Lisa Jarnot Erin Jourdan Erica Kaufman Amy King Bill Knott John Latta Ada Lim³n Reb Livingston Aaron McCollough Marlee MacLeod Sabrina Orah Mark Joe Massey Kristi Maxwell Didi Menendez Billy Merrell Mark Crispin Miller Andy Mister Simone Muench George Murray Gina Myers Daniel Nester Aimee Nezhukumatathil Joseph O’’Brien Danielle Pafunda Kemmeo Parr Amy Pierce Tony Robinson Lewis Robinson 67 days ago in The Unruly Servant Authority: 8
    CharmingPoetry.com
  • 43. Guide To The Ithaca House Archive,1969 - 1986
    Ithaca House poets include ron silliman, Ray DiPalma, Bob Perelman, Maxine Chernoff, Tom Mandel, Stephen Shrader, Steve Katz, Rochelle Nameroff,
    http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/RMM04679.html
    Guide to the Ithaca House Archive,
    Collection Number: 4679
    Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections
    Cornell University Library
    Contact Information: Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections
    2B Carl A. Kroch Library
    Cornell University
    Ithaca, NY 14853
    Fax: (607) 255-9524
    rareref@cornell.edu

    http://rmc.library.cornell.edu

    Compiled by: Robin J. Sowards and Sarah Gordon Date completed: January, 2003 EAD encoding: Sarah Gordon, 2003 DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY Title: Ithaca House archive,1969 - 1986 Collection Number: Creator: Ithaca House Quantity: 11 cubic feet Forms of Material: Manuscripts, correspondence, photographs, mock-ups, 2 audiocassettes . Repository: Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library Abstract: Manuscripts and material relating to books published by Ithaca House press; Business records of Ithaca House Press and Ithaca House Gallery and Bookstore. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE Ithaca House was a small poetry press founded by Baxter Hathaway, Professor of English at Cornell University, in December 1969. It published more than 100 titles during its 15 year existence which were produced by letter press and distributed through Serendipity (the forerunner of what is today Small Press Distribution) in Berkeley, CA. Ithaca House poets include Ron Silliman, Ray DiPalma, Bob Perelman, Maxine Chernoff, Tom Mandel, Stephen Shrader, Steve Katz, Rochelle Nameroff, and David Gitin. Also included are the works of Native American poets Joe Bruchac, Ralph Salisbury, and Peter Wild; as well as the work of African-American poets C. S. Giscombe, William J Harris, and Kenneth McClane.

    44. Ron Silliman
    Please note The biographical information and work samples included here are current for the year in which the fellowship was awarded.
    http://pewarts.org/98/Silliman/index.html

    45. Poets.org - Poetry, Poems, Bios & More - Great Anthology: In The American Tree
    ron silliman s anthology of language poetry, In the American Tree, takes its curatorial cue from a group of poets in the early 1970s who were interested in
    http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/5700
    Home View Cart Log In More Info FURTHER READING Related Prose A Brief Guide to Language Poetry Beyond the Manifesto: Language Poetry and Lyn Hejinian's The Language of Inquiry
    by Srikanth Reddy Great Anthology: American Poetry Since 1970: Up Late Related Authors Rae Armantrout Ron Silliman Adopt a Poet Add to Notebook ... Print Great Anthology: In the American Tree
    Ron Silliman
    's anthology of language poetry, In the American Tree, takes its curatorial cue from a group of poets in the early 1970s who were interested in "rejecting a speech-based poetics and consciously raising the issue of reference" in order to understand "what a poem is actually made of . . . language itself." Originally published in 1986, this anthology was reissued in 2002 and remains one of the foremost collections of American language poetry. The book is divided into three sections: "West," which includes west-coast poets Lyn Heijinian Michael Palmer , Rae Armantrout, and David Bromige; "East," including Susan Howe , Clark Coolidge, Bernadette Mayer , and Charles Bernstein ; and "The Second Front," which collects essays on poetics.

    46. Famous American Authors
    silliman, ron. silliman, ron. ron silliman. A weblog focused on contemporary poetry and poetics. ron silliman. Online works by ron silliman.
    http://www.zeroland.co.nz/american_literature_2.html
    Arts on the Web
    A Directory
    Film
    Music Literature Philosophy ... Store Literature Index: A B C D ... E-Texts
    American Authors, American Poets . A Web Directory
    Web www.zeroland.co.nz
    American Author and Poet Name Index: A B C D ... G H K L M Q ... W See also: American literature websites See also: Main author index
    H
    Hass, Robert
    Hass, Robert. Robert Hass. Academy of American Poets
    Robert Hass, a biography.
    Hawthorne, Nathaniel
    Hawthorne, Nathaniel. Nathaniel Hawthorne, Wikipedia entry.
    Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)
    . Nathaniel Hawthorne: links to texts, bibliographies, study questions, information.
    Nathaniel Hawthorne.Biography and Works
    ...
    The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Etext.
    Hecht, Anthony
    Hecht, Anthony. Anthony Hecht. Reading on internet audio.
    Anthony Hecht. Academy of American Poets
    Anthony Hecht. Wikipedia entry.
    Hemingway, Ernest
    Hemingway, Ernest. Ernest Hemingway Resource Centre Ernest Hemingway. Timeless Hemingway. An award-winning web site devoted to Ernest Hemingway showcasing unique educational material: a free Hemingway quote finder service, the largest Hemingway FAQ available on the Web, a messageboard, and chat opportunities with Hemingway's nephew, John E. Sanford. ... Hemingway-Pfieffer Museum and Educational Center. Wikipedia entries: A Clean, Well-Lighted Place

    47. Carol Peters: Ron Silliman & The National Book Award
    Thanks, ron silliman, for throttling PoBiz, this time the latest nominating panel and nominations for the 2007 National Book Awards.
    http://carolpeters.blogspot.com/2007/10/ron-silliman-national-book-award.html
    Carol Peters
    Monday, October 15, 2007
    Thanks, Ron Silliman , for throttling PoBiz, this time the latest nominating panel and nominations for the 2007 National Book Awards
    Posted by Carol Peters at 8:06 AM Labels: poet (live)
    comments:
    Post a Comment Newer Post Older Post Home Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)
    Carol Peters
    Charleston, SC and Hakalau, HI, United States My chapbook, Muddy Prints, Water Shine , will be published in the New Women's Voices Series by Finishing Line Press . My work appears in Letters to the World International Poetry Review miPOradio Pembroke ... Ink Pot , and inkburns . I read for The Gettysburg Review
    View my complete profile pigboy pig
    Presence
    Blog Archive

    48. Other Voices 1.2 (September 1998), Author Biographies
    Most recently he has edited a collection of essays on ron silliman, ron silliman and the Alphabet, which includes an essay by him entitled Reading silliman
    http://www.othervoices.org/1.2/authors.html

      Greg Bear
      Vance Bell

      Vance Bell is the founder and editor-in-chief of Other Voices Christian Davenport
      Christian Davenport is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Colorado at Boulder as well as Director of the Comparative Politics Center. His primary research interests include political control (i.e., tolerance, negative sanctions/human rights violations, and accommodation), social movements, and racism. He is the author of numerous articles appearing in the American Journal of Political Science The Journal of Politics Political Research Quarterly The Journal of Political and Research Quarterly , and Electoral Studies . His current research concerns the effect of international trade on repression and the contentious political behavior of the Black Panther Party, which is being supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation. Jonathan Eburne
      Jonathan Eburne is a fourth-year graduate student in Comparative Literature at the University of Pennsylvania. Dick Higgins
      Until his death in October 1998, Dick Higgins was a composer, painter, translator and art theorist. Happenings, Fluxus, Intermedia, Something Else Press, were a few of the terms commonly associated with Dick Higgins and his work. Having once remarked: "I find I never feel quite complete unless I'm doing all the artsvisual, musical and literary," Dick Higgins coined the term "Intermedia" to cover work of his own that fell conceptually between these categories. As the founder of Something Else Press he published works by Alan Kaprow, Gertrude Stein, Marshall McLuhan, John Cage, Merce Cunningham, Emmett Williams, and Ray Johnson among others. His forty-nine books include Poems

    49. Line Breaks
    what ron silliman calls points of nonintegration. Is it the same or different .. silliman, ron. What. Great Barrington The Figures, 1988.
    http://www.spinelessbooks.com/theory/linebreaks/index.html
    End-Stops, Enjambments, and Caesuras: Certain Line-Breaks in Recent American Poetry
    William Gillespie END-STOPS Before I lose interest in other writing I should ask what poetry is. Today, strictly speaking, poetry is almost always free verse, which is sometimes prose. Free verse, though, is not freedom from rules, which would not be liberating. Free verse is the freedom to choose your own rules, which is liberating. Poetry, then, is a textual act which does not privilege a single reading. Rules, techniques, forms, are methods of identifying and manipulating parameters of a poem. These parameters can include a range of interdependent and independent aspects of language. These aspects can include what words sound like (rhyme) or how many words. They can include grammatic structures, recognizable or not, and how words are spelled. They can include, as we shall see, how poetry is arranged on paper. A poet can even concern herself exclusively with exactly what the poem means Whatever poetry is is only immediately obvious to the eye: it has line-breaks.

    50. Poem By Ron Silliman In Shampoo Issue 24
    ron silliman. from Zyxt. Fra il dire et fare che il mezzo delle Mare — Mario Savio For Lyn Leslie. The hand without its palm would be nothing
    http://www.shampoopoetry.com/ShampooTwentyfour/silliman.html
    Ron Silliman from Zyxt Fra il dire et fare
    che il mezzo delle Mare
    The hand without its palm would be nothing
    The eye does not blink but rather this lid forms an architecture
    Involuntary discourse
    How can a painter sketch that blue, this grey, veined with the limbs of a thousand bare
    trees (ulcerated cherry) when I can’t remember even to include every word?
    Hush of the furnace, hum of the computer, the soft ratcheting of a small analog clock
    The only shadow cast by the moon
    A time of simple genocide (as if anything were simple
    alive today, they would be eighty – he simply found another, holding it for over four decades, never again to seek employment Thus tea burns off the roof of your mouth Senators in single file like school children, each signing the book acknowledging his or her oath as a juror in the forthcoming trial of the president, each handed a souvenir pen

    51. TYPO 10: CLAYTON ESHLEMAN
    ron silliman s blog and John Trantor s on line Jacket magazine (based in Australia ) review a range of books, including contemporary poetry.
    http://www.typomag.com/issue10/eshleman.html
    CLAYTON ESHLEMAN
    Wind from all Compass Points Not long ago in an issue of the politically liberal New York Review of Books , the poet/reviewer Charles Simic praised as a major achievement a poem by the then Poet Laureate Billy Collins which basically expressed Collin's "sensitive" surprise that cows actually moo. In a separate article, Simic dismissed Robert Duncan's inspired confrontation of the American destruction of Vietnam in 1967 in his poem "Uprising" as "worthless." This downgrading of Duncan's imaginative engagement with power, and the extoling of Collin's work, which is hardly even sophisticated entertainment, sadly exemplifies much of what is supported these days by editors, reviewers, and judges as endorsable American poetry. Some years ago, in Sulfur #10, Charles Bernstein defined the officially sanctioned verse of our time as characterized by "a restricted vocabulary, neutral and univocal tone in the guise of voice or persona, grammar-book syntax, received conceits, static and unitary form." This definition is still good today, some twenty years later. In the academic writing programs, the post-Confessional and Language poetries of the 1970s have fused to produce, in the main, a poetry that is an abstract display of self-sensitivity, the new "official verse." Such programs produce hundreds of young writers each year eager to be accepted, get jobs, and win prizes (virtually the only way a poet can get a first book published today is by winning a contest judged in most cases by a well-known conventional writer

    52. Silliman Benjamin Free Encyclopedia Articles At Questia.com
    McCole, John. Walter Benjamin and the Antinomies of Perception Chicago U of Chicago P, 1991. silliman, ron. The Political Economy.
    http://www.questia.com/library/encyclopedia/silliman-benjamin.jsp

    53. "No Other Sentence Could Have Followed But This": Ron Silliman's Tjanting, By Th
    ron silliman wrote Tjanting between June 1977 and March 1980, and the Figures (Great Barrington, Massachusetts) published it in 1981.
    http://www.emilydickinson.org/titanic/material/finksilliman.html
    "No Other Sentence Could Have Followed but This": Ron Silliman's Tjanting Thomas Fink
    Ron Silliman wrote Tjanting between June 1977 and March 1980, and the Figures (Great Barrington, Massachusetts) published it in 1981. At that time, Language Writing, of which Silliman has been a major exemplar, was poised to become well known among academics and literati outside its circle in the U.S. poetry scene. By 2002, when Salt Publishing (Applecross, Western Australia and Cambridge, United Kingdom) reissued the book, Language Writers had gained a great deal of notoriety (positive and negative) in the poetry mainstream and significant acceptance from a substantial group of academic cultural critics and theorists. Salt has done a considerable service in reprinting a crucially important Language text that many who imagine themselves well versed in Language Writing may not have read. Following the progression of the Fibonacci number system in the composition of Tjanting , Silliman writes a 19-paragraph work spanning almost 200 pages with the following number of sentencesand some of these sentences are fragments in each paragraph: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610, 987, 1597, 2584, 4181. Whereas the first eight paragraphs are on the first page (15), the nineteenth paragraph spans 79 pages, nearly 42% of the whole. If "going on too long will give rise to a whole new sense of rhythm" (154), Sìlliman's use of incredibly long paragraphs creates a rhythm in which an ongoing flux submerges awareness of the work's form, except when a paragraph happens, suddenly, to end, and another begins. Aesthetic structure cannot rid itself of the arbitrary in a bid for "organic form," and the text's formal extremity underlines this. The nineteenth paragraph's first sentence is: "What makes this the last paragraph?" (125); the answer is not forthcoming.

    54. Galatea Resurrects #8 (A Poetry Engagement): N/O By RON SILLIMAN
    N/O by ron silliman (Roof Books, New York, 1994) “I am attracted and repelled” begins the review And so begins my review, which adequately summarizes my
    http://galatearesurrection8.blogspot.com/2007/11/no-by-ron-silliman.html
    skip to main skip to sidebar
    Galatea Resurrects #8 (A Poetry Engagement)
    Presenting engagements (including reviews) of poetry projects. Some issues also offer Featured Poets selected primarily by guest editors, and/or Feature Articles.
    Thursday, November 29, 2007
    N/O by RON SILLIMAN
    ERIC HOFFMAN Reviews
    N/O by Ron Silliman
    (Roof Books, New York, 1994)
    begins the review
    And so begins my review, which adequately summarizes my reaction to this, Silliman's nineteenth collection of poems, another addition to his long poem, The Alphabet , itself part of a longer, life's work, called Ketjak N/O non and oz
    Long poems are a bit out of fashion as of late, given the short attention span of many readers of poetry, themselves a minority these days. Readers of long poems, therefore, are a minority of a minority, and part of this is due to the modernist tradition of which Silliman's poetry is extension I'm thinking not only of Ezra Pound's notoriously difficult Cantos but also of Olson's Maximus Poems or even Silliman's contemporary Rachel Blau DuPlessis' Drafts or Ronald Johnson's Ark . Like DuPlessis, Silliman's work is a pastiche of various poetic forms and themes, integrated into a somewhat loose thematic structure; like Johnson, Silliman is a devotee of poet Louis Zukofsky, particularly the Zukofsky of

    55. Rhubarb Is Susan: Ron Silliman : From
    The ron silliman piece reads incredibly like a certain type of New Yorker magazine prose at it s most studied, as though a hush around every word,
    http://rhubarbissusan.blogspot.com/2007/05/ron-silliman-from-zyxt.html
    Zyxt @import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?targetBlogID=9797813"); var BL_backlinkURL = "http://www.blogger.com/dyn-js/backlink_count.js";var BL_blogId = "9797813";
    rhubarb is susan
    go to the main page
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    My work
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    GutCult
    horseless
    moria Typo
    Essential Reading List Past Masters Sappho . Where it all began, in a translation by Anne Carson. For a saner crib walk-through, see also the facing-page translations of the Loeb edition Emily Dickinson : Reading Edition . The essential American. Gertrude Stein : Earlier Writings . Includes Lesbian classic Lifting Belly and the all important Tender Buttons Present Gurus Frederick Seidel : Cosmos Trilogy . Disturbing and great: a commedia -like voyage from string theory through to New York City by a very unusual poet. Carole Maso : Ava . Tremendous: a readable prose poem. See also David Markson : Wittgenstein's Mistress Lyn Hejinian : Writing is an Aid to Memory . A good a place as any to get in to one of the most important matriarchs of contemporary writing. See also Happily Lisa Robertson : XEcologue . Like Lyn, you eventually collect it all; XEclogue is one place to start in another blast from the North.

    56. Companion List
    silliman, ron 500 words assigned Simic, Charles 500 words assigned Simpson, Louis 1000 words assigned Smith, Dave 500 words assigned
    http://web.njit.edu/~kimmelma/companionlist.html
    A Companion to 20th Century American Poetry
    (Facts on File, Inc., 2004) Burt Kimmelman , Editor Claiming an essay? Then please e-mail: kimmelman@njit.edu ; use the subject line "Essays for Book." If you are interested in writing for the Companion then please furnish a bio including publications if any (copy and paste into an e-mail).
    List of Entries (see all three sections below - look for
    unclaimed essays [IGNORE THE "ASSIGNED" TAGS ALL UNCLAIMED ESSAYS ARE LISTED ABOVE Poets Ackerman, Diane 500 words [assigned]
    Adam, Helen 500 words [assigned]
    Ai 500 words [assigned]
    Aiken, Conrad 1000 words [assigned]
    Alexie, Sherman 500 words [assigned]
    Algarin, Miguel 500 words [assigned]
    Ammons, A.R. 1000 words [assigned]
    Andrews, Bruce 500 words [assigned]
    Angelou, Maya 500 words [assigned] Antin, David 500 words [assigned] Armantrout, Rae 500 words [assigned] Ashbery, John 1500 words [assigned] Atkins, Russell 500 words [assigned] Auden, W.H. 1000 words [assigned] Auster, Paul 500 words [assigned]

    57. Goodreads | Ron Silliman
    Get all the rants and raves about ron silliman s books on Goodreads.com where you can see what your friends are reading.
    http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/300074

    58. Performance And Politics In Contemporary Poetics: Three Recent Titles From Atelo
    Unlike their predecessors New Sentence, though, these women are differently invested in what ron silliman denounces as conventional syntax s syllogistic
    http://www3.iath.virginia.edu/pmc/current.issue/17.3keenaghan.html
      THIS ISSUE ALL ISSUES TALK BACK MUSE ... IATH
      Performance and Politics in Contemporary Poetics: Three Recent Titles from Atelos Press
      Eric Keenaghan
      State University of New York, Albany
      ekeenaghan@albany.edu
      2007 Eric Keenaghan.
      Review of:
      Laura Moriarty, Ultravioleta . Berkeley: Atelos, 2006; Jocelyn Saidenberg, Negativity . Berkeley: Atelos, 2006; Juliana Spahr, The Transformation . Berkeley: Atelos, 2007.
  • Disturbed by the mid-century capitalistic imperative that Americans make a living, and unsatisfied with the Soviet Union's alternative of valorizing communal labor, Hannah Arendt seeks in the human condition some other idea of freedom. She is drawn to the ancient Greek polis model of a public space accessible exclusively to free male citizens liberated from the bonds of household labor and the work of crafting material goods. There men freely engaged in activities possessing , or a liberating virtuosity and improvisational subtlety not unlike that of a musical performance. For Arendt, politics, speech, and music "do not pursue an end (are ateleis ) and leave no work behind (no par' autas erga ), but exhaust their full meaning in the performance itself." The freest and most political action in this schema is that which expends itself in the moment and place of its enactment, where "the performance is the work" (206). Arendt especially struggles to pinpoint where poetry lies in her tripartite schemata of work, labor, and action. She contends that "a poem is less a thing than any other work of art; yet even a poem, no matter how long it existed as a living spoken word in the recollection of the bard and those who listened to him, will eventually be 'made,' that is, written down and transformed into a tangible thing among things" (170). An odd predicament, indeed. Poetry does not belong to this world, nor can it found a
  • 59. Gartner Analyst Profile: Ron Silliman
    Report Highlight for Dataquest Insight PC and Workstation Manufacturer Service and Warranty Offerings, North America, 2007, 03Jan-2008, ron silliman
    http://www.gartner.com/AnalystBiography?authorId=18448

    60. The Age Of Huts (compleat) By Ron Silliman - PopMatters Book Review
    The Age of Huts (compleat) by ron silliman review by $author If The Age of Huts provides any indication, were witnessing the development of what is sure
    http://www.popmatters.com/pm/books/reviews/43531/the-age-of-huts-compleat-by-ron
    @import "http://www.popmatters.com/pm?css=core/legacy_css_tables"; @import "http://www.popmatters.com/pm?css=core/print_css"; Features Columns Blogs News ...
    http://www.popmatters.com/pm/books/reviews/43531/the-age-of-huts-compleat-by-ron-silliman/
    The Age of Huts (compleat)
    by Ron Silliman
    University of California Press
    April 2007, 324 pages, $19.95
    by Andrew Ervin
    The Philadelphia Inquirer (MCT)

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