Susan Howe’s Caesurae

Readings of Susan Howe’s visual poetry tend to focus on how she uses the space of the page to act on language, through an opposition, then, between the visual and the textual. This paper argues that Howe’s works are specified precisely by the way they obscure the line between what is and is not ling...

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Main Author: Andrew Eastman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Française d'Etudes Américaines 2021-07-01
Series:Transatlantica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/17044
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author Andrew Eastman
author_facet Andrew Eastman
author_sort Andrew Eastman
collection DOAJ
description Readings of Susan Howe’s visual poetry tend to focus on how she uses the space of the page to act on language, through an opposition, then, between the visual and the textual. This paper argues that Howe’s works are specified precisely by the way they obscure the line between what is and is not linguistic. The paper looks into the ways in which Susan Howe’s poems, specifically in her recent collection Debths, depend on and work with the line unit, use and abuse our sense that poems appear in typographic lines. Three examples from Debths look at problems raised by the various ways in which Howe scissors the line, arguing that the line is a place where something happens to language, a frame for a caesura, a space where a silence can take place—as seen in the book’s title. Syntax and its caesuring then “make” the line, a line which works as a way of intimating voice, exploring the interstices of language and body.
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spelling doaj-art-df0d2474bc8f4546af4f5e584b4653db2025-01-30T10:43:38ZengAssociation Française d'Etudes AméricainesTransatlantica1765-27662021-07-01110.4000/transatlantica.17044Susan Howe’s CaesuraeAndrew EastmanReadings of Susan Howe’s visual poetry tend to focus on how she uses the space of the page to act on language, through an opposition, then, between the visual and the textual. This paper argues that Howe’s works are specified precisely by the way they obscure the line between what is and is not linguistic. The paper looks into the ways in which Susan Howe’s poems, specifically in her recent collection Debths, depend on and work with the line unit, use and abuse our sense that poems appear in typographic lines. Three examples from Debths look at problems raised by the various ways in which Howe scissors the line, arguing that the line is a place where something happens to language, a frame for a caesura, a space where a silence can take place—as seen in the book’s title. Syntax and its caesuring then “make” the line, a line which works as a way of intimating voice, exploring the interstices of language and body.https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/17044oralitySusan Howevisual poetrypoetic lineline-breakcaesura
spellingShingle Andrew Eastman
Susan Howe’s Caesurae
Transatlantica
orality
Susan Howe
visual poetry
poetic line
line-break
caesura
title Susan Howe’s Caesurae
title_full Susan Howe’s Caesurae
title_fullStr Susan Howe’s Caesurae
title_full_unstemmed Susan Howe’s Caesurae
title_short Susan Howe’s Caesurae
title_sort susan howe s caesurae
topic orality
Susan Howe
visual poetry
poetic line
line-break
caesura
url https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/17044
work_keys_str_mv AT andreweastman susanhowescaesurae