Context collapse A poem containing a history of poetry

Ryan Ruby

Book - 2024

"Prophet. Entertainer. Courtier. Criminal. Revolutionary. Critic. Scholar. Nobody. Context Collapse is the secret history of the poet--from Bronze Age Greece and Renaissance Italy to the cafés of Grub Street and the Latin Quarter, from the creative writing departments of the American Midwest to the boardrooms of Silicon Valley. Cheekily introducing academic discourse, media studies, cybersemiotics, literary sociology, and heterodox economics into his blank verse study of poetry, Ruby traces the always delicate dance between poets, their publishers, and their audiences, and shows how, time and time again, the social, technological, and aesthetic experiments that appear in poetic language have prefigured radical changes to the ways of l...ife of millions of people. It is precisely to poets to whom we ought to turn to catch a glimpse, as Shelley once put it, of the "gigantic shadows futurity casts on the present.""--

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Subjects
Genres
Blank verse
Literary criticism
Published
New York : Seven Stories Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Ryan Ruby (author)
Physical Description
xv, 220 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781644214237
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Literary critic Ruby (The Zero and the One) delivers a dazzling and ambitious "verse essay" tracing the history of poetry from Homer through the present. He begins with early Greek poetry performances, where audiences didn't seek to interpret the poet's words so much as "judge the skill with which they are sung." In medieval times, poetry was usually composed by court troubadours and performed by jongleurs (itinerant entertainers), Ruby explains, discussing how troubadours developed increasingly complicated rhyme schemes to make it difficult for "unscrupulous" jongleurs to introduce their own changes. Elsewhere, Ruby describes how poets attempted more sophisticated literary techniques after the 15th-century invention of the printing press, which enabled readers to spend more time parsing texts; how modernists wrote thematically dense verse in hopes of inspiring enough scholarly exegesis to keep their names alive after their deaths; and how a contemporary overabundance of poets makes it appear that most poems are read by few and culturally irrelevant. Ruby's effortless synthesis of artistic, cultural, and technological developments makes him an excellent historical guide, and the verse essay format--consciously modeled on the argumentative poetry of Parmenides and Alexander Pope, among others--proves a novel reading experience. This literary history stands in a class all its own. (Nov.)

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