Spectral Telepathy: the Late Style of Susan Howe

Susan Howe’s late style marks a departure from her earlier work. Two books recently published—The Quarry (New Directions, 2015) and Tom Tit Tot (Museum of Modern Art, 2015) illustrate this point. Whereas Howe’s earlier books of critical prose—for example, My Emily Dickinson (1985)—used scholarship t...

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Main Author: Marjorie Perloff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Française d'Etudes Américaines 2017-01-01
Series:Transatlantica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/8146
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author Marjorie Perloff
author_facet Marjorie Perloff
author_sort Marjorie Perloff
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description Susan Howe’s late style marks a departure from her earlier work. Two books recently published—The Quarry (New Directions, 2015) and Tom Tit Tot (Museum of Modern Art, 2015) illustrate this point. Whereas Howe’s earlier books of critical prose—for example, My Emily Dickinson (1985)—used scholarship to buttress Howe’s critical positions and arguments, her new “essays” in The Quarry are more properly understood as poems. When we analyze Howe’s meditations on Wallace Stevens, we learn that she identifies with Stevens to create a new poetic hybrid. And the language and rhythm of these new essays is that of a poetic construct. In the same vein, her long poetic sequence, Tom Tit Tot, made up of fragments of other people’s writings, the underlying thread being the fairy tale of Rumpelstiltskin (Tom Tit Tot), is a conceptual work that appropriates fragments of other texts so as to create an entirely new angle on the fairy tale and its cognates. Both of these new books show how contemporary technique—facsimile, xerography, overprint, digital processing—can reanimate literary texts and make them new. Howe’s austere later writing is perhaps her very finest.
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spelling doaj-art-067c7f179c1a46df988bccc8001572e92025-01-30T10:46:05ZengAssociation Française d'Etudes AméricainesTransatlantica1765-27662017-01-01110.4000/transatlantica.8146Spectral Telepathy: the Late Style of Susan HoweMarjorie PerloffSusan Howe’s late style marks a departure from her earlier work. Two books recently published—The Quarry (New Directions, 2015) and Tom Tit Tot (Museum of Modern Art, 2015) illustrate this point. Whereas Howe’s earlier books of critical prose—for example, My Emily Dickinson (1985)—used scholarship to buttress Howe’s critical positions and arguments, her new “essays” in The Quarry are more properly understood as poems. When we analyze Howe’s meditations on Wallace Stevens, we learn that she identifies with Stevens to create a new poetic hybrid. And the language and rhythm of these new essays is that of a poetic construct. In the same vein, her long poetic sequence, Tom Tit Tot, made up of fragments of other people’s writings, the underlying thread being the fairy tale of Rumpelstiltskin (Tom Tit Tot), is a conceptual work that appropriates fragments of other texts so as to create an entirely new angle on the fairy tale and its cognates. Both of these new books show how contemporary technique—facsimile, xerography, overprint, digital processing—can reanimate literary texts and make them new. Howe’s austere later writing is perhaps her very finest.https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/8146documentaryrepetitionessayhybridityrhythmanaphora
spellingShingle Marjorie Perloff
Spectral Telepathy: the Late Style of Susan Howe
Transatlantica
documentary
repetition
essay
hybridity
rhythm
anaphora
title Spectral Telepathy: the Late Style of Susan Howe
title_full Spectral Telepathy: the Late Style of Susan Howe
title_fullStr Spectral Telepathy: the Late Style of Susan Howe
title_full_unstemmed Spectral Telepathy: the Late Style of Susan Howe
title_short Spectral Telepathy: the Late Style of Susan Howe
title_sort spectral telepathy the late style of susan howe
topic documentary
repetition
essay
hybridity
rhythm
anaphora
url https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/8146
work_keys_str_mv AT marjorieperloff spectraltelepathythelatestyleofsusanhowe