New book: A Common Strangeness

Jacob Edmond jacob.edmond at OTAGO.AC.NZ
Wed Jun 27 10:18:23 UTC 2012


Dear colleagues,

My book _A Common Strangeness: Contemporary Poetry, Cross-Cultural Encounter, Comparative Literature_ is just out from Fordham University Press. The book may be of particular interest to list members who work on contemporary Russian literature and art and on Russian culture in the context of globalization.

"This bold triangulation of six Chinese, Russian, and American poets advances lively current debates about global literature by exploring encounters that challenge the old binarisms and chart possibilities of literary singularities for a future poetics. Edmond's shrewd account of literary crossings in post-Cold War history helps us imagine how we can experience the challenge of new literary configurations."
--Jonathan Culler, Cornell University

"A Common Strangeness is unique among studies of contemporary poetics in being genuinely global in its perspective and its reach. At home in Russian and Chinese as well as American poetry and that of his native New Zealand, Jacob Edmond pinpoints the crucial relationships that exist between what are seemingly disparate poetic cultures. The Chinese poet Yang Lian, who lived in exile in Auckland, is read under the sign of Benjamin and Baudelaire. The American Language poet Lyn Hejinian's important dialogue with the Russian avant-gardist Arkadii Dragomoshchenko is studied carefully, and Bei Dao, Dmitri Prigov, and Charles Bernstein are treated as representative figures of cross-cultural thinking in the age of globalism. Edmond's is a provocative, exciting, and genuinely original study of the new poetics; we will all be learning from it!"
--Marjorie Perloff, Stanford University

“Jacob Edmond addresses what he calls ‘forms of textual strangeness’ across contemporary poems of beautiful complexity and staying power. This theoretically astute book challenges us to read with a keener eye and to recognize how much poetry can tell us about political catastrophes, national dislocations, and promises of cultural renewal.”
—Stephanie Sandler, Harvard University

For further details, see my blog: http://commonstrangeness.wordpress.com<http://commonstrangeness.wordpress.com/>

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Jacob Edmond
University of Otago, New Zealand
http://www.otago.ac.nz/english/staff/edmond.html
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