Shame as method in 'Lyric Shame'
Photo by Anthony Easton, via flickr.
Lyric Shame (2014), a method-driven reappraisal of the mid- to late-twentieth-century “lyric” poem, looks to readers’ shame as an interpretive device. Shame: that blushing state that finds us thinking of what others must be thinking and/or self-caught in the act of wanting something (something others do not think we should be wanting); an awareness of exposure or of being seen by others; a social signpost; a readable heat.
David Antin, Eleanor Antin, Richard Tuttle, Charles Bernstein at Zinc Bar in Nov. 2013
new at PennSound