The Alphabet Primer by Clive Hicks-Jenkins, showing part of the Griffin, John Barleycorn, and the Knight. |
Seek Giacometti’s “The Palace at 4 a.m.” Go back two hours. See towers and curtain walls of matchsticks, marble, marbles, light, cloud at stasis. Walk in. The beggar queen is dreaming on her throne of words… You have arrived at the web home of Marly Youmans, maker of novels, poems, and stories, as well as the occasional fantasy. D. G. Myers: "A writer who has more resolutely stood her ground against the tide of literary fashion would be difficult to name."
Pages
- Home
- Seren of the Wildwood 2023
- Charis in the World of Wonders 2020
- The Book of the Red King 2019
- Maze of Blood 2015
- Glimmerglass 2014
- Thaliad 2012
- The Foliate Head 2012
- A Death at the White Camellia Orphanage 2012
- The Throne of Psyche 2011
- Val/Orson 2009
- Ingledove 2005
- Claire 2003
- The Curse of the Raven Mocker 2003
- The Wolf Pit 2001
- Catherwood 1996
- Little Jordan 1995
- Short stories and poems
- Honors, praise, etc.
- Events
SAFARI seems to no longer work
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Deep reading
13 comments:
Alas, I must once again remind large numbers of Chinese salesmen and other worldwide peddlers that if they fall into the Gulf of Spam, they will be eaten by roaming Balrogs. The rest of you, lovers of grace, poetry, and horses (nod to Yeats--you do not have to be fond of horses), feel free to leave fascinating missives and curious arguments.
I think that the Book, in some form, will always exist..
ReplyDeleteI know too many artists who love playing with the form! I'm one.. Have been planning one using leaves of glass, presenting images in a nested form, for quite some time.
It'll take a generation or two to make my tree based books rare, true.. But I do believe that reading a computer screen is causing harm to the human eye.. Eyes arent used to having light beamed constantly into them like reading a lit tablet does... So, I don't believe that tablet reading, as it stands now, will replace books, not yet ;)
Meran
Leaves of glass! I want to see pictures when you're done...
ReplyDeleteI've been working on the dea for years... I'm kinda stuck on the "hingeing"... It's the spot where it needs to be strongest, and yet, everything I think of makes it weakest there...
ReplyDeleteOtherwise, I know ~exactly what I want to do, for several editions. And now I kinda know how to paint (before, I was just playing around)...
I can use fire on paints (permanent), or oil paints, or oil pastels, or even acrylics... Just those darned hinge attachments are keeping me back!
I'm sure I'll show you ASAP when I do it ;)
Meran
That's "idea"
ReplyDelete:D
Meran
Looking forward to "Leaves of Glass."
ReplyDeleteWhen I was in grad school in the 1980s in the English Dept of a well known American university, the art of close reading--slow, imaginative, analytic reading of fiction and poetry--was being tossed aside in favor of "theory." Close reading, of the kind evident in literary criticism prior to that time, was something most people in my classes took for granted--without necessarily knowing how to do it. This was evident especially in my poetry classes as well as in the contemporary, almost unreadable criticism of the late 20th century. When I wanted to learn something about a book or writer I was reading, I went first to books of criticism written in the 50s, 60s, and 70s.
ReplyDeleteThese readers brought to their work not only an intimate knowledge of the texts I was studying, but a wide-ranging knowledge of other literature and history. And they weren't ashamed of reading closely--often very closely--and writing well about the experience.
I bet it was evident in poetry!
ReplyDeleteI had a lucky grad school experience in that I was at the tail end at my school of an old-fashioned cherishing of literary and critical tradition. But the old guard was dying off and has now been replaced.
I LOVE reading critiques (or studies) of books I'm reading or have read! (not cliff notes)
ReplyDeleteI don't mind reading reviews, but they're not usually critiques... They may be critical, which isn't the same thing at all, and many times, just petty.
I didn't realize those weren't being done anymore! What happened to cause that?
Meran
European theory invaded! And won. Close reading seeped away, highly unfashionable. I do think that writers who want to conserve the older tradition exist. Also, we have few general critics where we once had a good many popular, influential thinkers like Edmund Wilson, Lionel Trilling, etc.
ReplyDeleteAs a person who went for an MFA to UC Irvine, a theory intensive school, and stayed for a PhD in Comparative Literature, I can say that close reading is not as incompatible with the newer brands of interpretation as you might think.
ReplyDeleteOf course, loving that mode of reading, I still feel most comfortable with those theories that use this methods, such as Russian Formalism and Neo-Formalism and variations of this, Narratology, and sometimes elements of structuralism.
But where would deconstruction be without close reading? Though I tire of their coy use of language and obscurity, essentially, they use close reading to find the paradox and aporia they claim underlie all texts.
I am teaching a class in literary theory online this summer... doubly divorced from the traditional methods of pedagogy and the traditional text, but I for one will still be using paper texts, underlining, and drafting any writing of some length I will do as instructor in the course.
Go, Robbi! Redeem theory... I leave the job to you, however!
ReplyDeleteWe'll see how it goes. I would still rather read a plain old book, when it comes down to it, and write poems of course!
ReplyDeleteI don't think I'll be writing any theoretical poetry. Though one never knows...
Don't rule it out!
ReplyDeleteSent you a Hollins invite and saw you are already there...