Language poetry
Found in 264 Collections and/or Records:
PhasEoStrophes 1: An Initial Wave / Berry, Jake., 1996
PhasEoStrophes 2: Latencies / Berry, Jake., 1996
Plasm / Leftwich, Jim., 1997
pleasure TEXT possession; InterWriting 1996-2001 / Damon, Maria ; And, Miekal., 2005
This book includes E.N.T.R.A.N.C.E.D, published in a pamphlet in 2002 and purchased at the Avant Garde Poetry symposium, Ohio State, 2002 by the Sackners. However, this book states that the poem was first published in 2004 in a limited chapbook edition by Xexoxial Editions. The duplicate copy does not contain the E.N.T.R.A.N.C.E. pamphlet. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Pliny's Knickers Book One / Clark, Hilary ; Smith, Steven Ross., 2005
Plug in the Electric Dictionary / Moe, H. David ; Micheline J., 1973
The poems in this book are prototypic language poems in which Moe appears to be excited by the sound and juxtapostion of words and neologisms. Jack Micheline contributed an introductory essay reproduced in his own handwriting. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Poetic Justice / Bernstein, Charles., 1979
Poisons, their antidotes / Bonney, Sean., 2003
Martin Corless-Smith on the back cover describes these poems as "glass-sharp graffiti collages of political spin and half heard blah blahs rage with humour." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Pon a Time Flame / Bennett, John M. ; Ernst, Kathy., 2001
Potes & Poets: Disfrutes. No.2 / Charles Bernstein., 1981
This is the 2nd edition of the book that was first published in 1979. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Potes & Poets: Excommunicate. No.8 / Bruce Andrews., 1982
Potes & Poets: Two Space Six. No.9 / Peter Ganick., 1982
Potes & Poets: Zone Du Jour. No.1 / Dan Raphael., 1981
& Proportions / Leftwich, Jim ; Anonymous., 1996
Leftwich's language poetry is overlaid by "Anonymous" mathematical formulas. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
R + B , 1981
Rectangular Morning Poem, 1989
Red, Green & Black / Cadiot, Olivier ; Bernstein, Charles., 1990
Repeater / McEwan, Andrew., 2012
The author uses the ASCII 8-bit binary code for each letter of the alphabeta as an acrostic so that the poems encode an investigation of layered and digitized language into the heart of the code itself. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.