The Modernist Poem or the Infinite Prolegomena

Starting from Giorgio Agamben’s observation that “the end of the poem” is threatened by generic indefiniteness, this article explores what occurs when, on the other end, the text refuses to begin, postponing its own formulation in favor of a never-ending foreword. Far from enabling an absolute conta...

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Main Author: Aurore Clavier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Française d'Etudes Américaines 2020-12-01
Series:Transatlantica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/15232
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author Aurore Clavier
author_facet Aurore Clavier
author_sort Aurore Clavier
collection DOAJ
description Starting from Giorgio Agamben’s observation that “the end of the poem” is threatened by generic indefiniteness, this article explores what occurs when, on the other end, the text refuses to begin, postponing its own formulation in favor of a never-ending foreword. Far from enabling an absolute contact between words and things that would settle once and for all the ambiguous relationship between reality and imagination, the seemingly close unit of the poem or collection, more particularly as it was expressed by American modernism, is thus jeopardized, the text being assigned to the virtuality of a “placeless place” (Aristotle; Agamben) where poetry and philosophy may meet. Refusing its own closure, the page of the poem, through the fluctuations of its contours and the engagements it stages, joins the tentative field of the essay, thereby abolishing generic categories as much as the Platonic scission between philosophical and poetical words.
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language English
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record_format Article
series Transatlantica
spelling doaj-art-ed2227caf3064013af272f653202f6dd2025-01-30T10:43:45ZengAssociation Française d'Etudes AméricainesTransatlantica1765-27662020-12-01110.4000/transatlantica.15232The Modernist Poem or the Infinite ProlegomenaAurore ClavierStarting from Giorgio Agamben’s observation that “the end of the poem” is threatened by generic indefiniteness, this article explores what occurs when, on the other end, the text refuses to begin, postponing its own formulation in favor of a never-ending foreword. Far from enabling an absolute contact between words and things that would settle once and for all the ambiguous relationship between reality and imagination, the seemingly close unit of the poem or collection, more particularly as it was expressed by American modernism, is thus jeopardized, the text being assigned to the virtuality of a “placeless place” (Aristotle; Agamben) where poetry and philosophy may meet. Refusing its own closure, the page of the poem, through the fluctuations of its contours and the engagements it stages, joins the tentative field of the essay, thereby abolishing generic categories as much as the Platonic scission between philosophical and poetical words.https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/15232genrepoetryMarianne MooreModernismessayWilliam Carlos Williams
spellingShingle Aurore Clavier
The Modernist Poem or the Infinite Prolegomena
Transatlantica
genre
poetry
Marianne Moore
Modernism
essay
William Carlos Williams
title The Modernist Poem or the Infinite Prolegomena
title_full The Modernist Poem or the Infinite Prolegomena
title_fullStr The Modernist Poem or the Infinite Prolegomena
title_full_unstemmed The Modernist Poem or the Infinite Prolegomena
title_short The Modernist Poem or the Infinite Prolegomena
title_sort modernist poem or the infinite prolegomena
topic genre
poetry
Marianne Moore
Modernism
essay
William Carlos Williams
url https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/15232
work_keys_str_mv AT auroreclavier themodernistpoemortheinfiniteprolegomena
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