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Critical text

 Subject

Subject Source: Sackner Database

Found in 271 Collections and/or Records:

Projecto:Poesia, 1984

 Item
Identifier: CC-15147-15468
Scope and Contents

This book is a history of Portuguese poetry. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1984

Prosa politica, 2005

 Item
Identifier: CC-47593-68602
Scope and Contents

This book consists of a collection of anti-religious establishment essays. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 2005

Prosa zum Beispiel, 1965

 Item
Identifier: CC-33459-35101
Scope and Contents

This book is a collection of brief, critical essays. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1965

Protiv Abstrakwionisma B Iskoosstby (Against Abstraction in Art) / Lebedev, A.K.., 1963

 Item
Identifier: CC-62650-48578
Scope and Contents

Reproductions of paintings by Mark Rothko and Mark Toby are included in this book. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1963

Publit, 1971

 Item
Identifier: CC-07851-8004
Scope and Contents

Ferdinand Kriwet contributed an introductory essay, "Decomposition of the Literary Unit: Notes on Visually Perceptible Literature" that traced the historical antecedents of concrete and poetry. This is followed by an illustrated section on his own linguistic and compositional techniques involving circular concrete poems, "Rundsheiben." "Walk Talk," a vinyl, floor covering, a portion of which was given to the Sackners by Kriwet is depicted in the book.Kriwet defines his term "Sehtext" as a solution to the problem of visually perceptible literature. It is the tension between the physical act of seeing and the intellectual one of reading. Seeing is a process of perception; reading is the reaction to it. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1971

Radical Artifice: Writing Poetry in the Age of Media, 1991

 Item
Identifier: CC-04787-4878
Scope and Contents

Perloff demonstrates that contempory experimental poetry is highly influenced by the media of television, sound bytes and billboards. Taking an historical approach, she notes that the speech base is no longer the common speech of Yeats and Eliot but the personal utterance of the poet. She cites Charles Olsen in his manifesto "Projective Verse" (1950) who stated that "breath allows all the speech-force of language back in (speech is the solid of verse, is the secret of a poem's energy) p.34. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1991

Raoul Hausmann, 1994

 Item
Identifier: CC-29936-31327
Scope and Contents

This catalogue doocuments the first major retrospective of Hausmann's work for the exhibition that was shown in the three countries in which Hausmann lived, France, Germany and Spain (Ibiza). Several scholary essays are included in the catalogue tracing his early years as a Dadaist, collages and photomontages, the photographic works, sound poetry, abstract paintings and later Dada works. Chistopher Phillips essay, "In the Chaotic Cave of the Mouth," describes Hausmann's sound poems, which are considered "among the most difficult and perplexing" of this "recondite genre." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1994

Res Publica: The Public Works 1968-1999, 1999

 Item
Identifier: CC-34554-36253
Scope and Contents

Although Gerz began as a visual poet, his later work dealt often with the events of the Holocaust. Gerz's public works frequently took the form of interviews and participation of the viewer. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1999

Schreibmaschinengrafik , 1975

 Item — Box Artist Boxed Materials/Oversized: A-Ba: [Barcode: 31858072491164]
Identifier: CC-20874-21283
Scope and Contents

S. Wiese wrote the text. Klaus Basset was born in 1926 and died in 1996. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1975

Seashells, 1971

 Item — Box Artist Boxed Materials/Oversized: Finlay, Ian Hamilton: [Barcode: 31858072491461]
Identifier: CC-11863-12084
Scope and Contents

The essay written by Stephen Bann on the back inside folder explains the metaphor of grouping designs of hulls of sailing ships like sea shells in a display case. Proctor is a ship designer and Costley the artist who made this print. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1971

Selected Ponds, 1975

 Item
Identifier: CC-12007-12230
Scope and Contents

The photographs of the sculpture in Finlay's garden were made by Dave Patterson. Two brief introductory essays by Bernard Lassus and Stephen Bann are included in the first four pages. The remainder of this book consists of photographs. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1975

Selections, 2012

 Item
Identifier: CC-58434-10001652
Scope and Contents Harriet Staff reviewed the book in Poetry News November 28, 2012: Ian Hamilton Finlay's new book, Selections (UC Press 2012), edited with an introduction by Alec Finlay, has been reviewed over at Booktryst. Alastair Johnston writes of Finlay's later-life recognition, noting that "[a]mong the most fatal accolades one can achieve is to be called "greatest living' anything." What follows is his poetic work in biographical context, down to the garden art (the post also includes great photos of Finlay's early books and ephemera; and links to other concrete poets and related resources): This new book compacts much of his writing into one volume. His early poems are mostly negligible, but the odd memorable line occurs ("The dancers inherit the party"-- also the title of his first book of poems). Glasgow Beasts is a charming series of childlike verses written in broad Gleskae dialect. (Finlay's early battles with the dole come off like an episode of Rab C Nesbit.)In 1963, Finlay began to...
Dates: 2012