Sneha Girap (Editor)

Stephen Burt

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Language
  
English

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Stephen Burt

Genre
  
Literary Criticism

Nationality
  
American


Stephen Burt englishfasharvardeduwpcontentuploads201307


Alma mater
  
Harvard University; Yale University

Notable works
  
Randall Jarrell and His Age; "The New Things"; "elliptical poetry"

Education
  
Yale University, Harvard University

Books
  
Close Calls with Nonsens, Belmont: Poems, The Art of the Sonnet, The Weather Observer, Randall Jarrell and his age

Similar People
  
Rae Armantrout, David Mikics, Alfred Bendixen, Randall Jarrell

Stephen burt why people need poetry


Stephen Burt is a literary critic, poet, and professor at Harvard University. The New York Times has called him "one of the most influential poetry critics of his generation."

Contents

Stephen Burt Biography Stephen Burt

Stephen Burt, "Belmont: Poems"


Elliptical poetry

Stephen Burt Stephen Burt The Poetry Foundation

Burt received significant attention for coining the term "elliptical poetry" in a 1998 book review of Susan Wheeler's book Smokes in Boston Review magazine:

Stephen Burt DIVEDAPPER Stephen Burt

Elliptical poets try to manifest a person—who speaks the poem and reflects the poet—while using all the verbal gizmos developed over the last few decades to undermine the coherence of speaking selves. They are post-avant-gardist, or post-"postmodern": they have read (most of them) Stein's heirs, and the "language writers," and have chosen to do otherwise. Elliptical poems shift drastically between low (or slangy) and high (or naively "poetic") diction. Some are lists of phrases beginning "I am an X, I am a Y." Ellipticism's favorite established poets are Dickinson, Berryman, Ashbery, and/or Auden. . .The poets tell almost-stories, or almost-obscured ones. They are sardonic, angered, defensively difficult, or desperate; they want to entertain as thoroughly as, but not to resemble, television.

Stephen Burt Stephen Burt Poet and Critic Author of Close Calls With Nonsense

Burt also adds that elliptical poets are "good at describing information overload." In addition to calling the subject of Burt's review, Susan Wheeler, an important elliptical poet, Burt also lists Liam Rector's The Sorrow of Architecture (1984), Lucie Brock-Broido's The Master Letters (1995), Mark Ford's Landlocked (1992), and Mark Levine's debut, Debt (1993) as "some groundbreaking and definitively Elliptical books."

The New Thing

Stephen Burt THIRTYONE QUESTIONS AND TWELVE APOLOGIES BY WAY OF A THANKYOU NOTE

In 2009, Burt wrote "The New Things", an essay in which he posits a new category of American contemporary poets, which he calls "The New Thing." These poets derive their style from the likes of William Carlos Williams, Robert Creeley, Gertrude Stein and George Oppen:

The poets of the New Thing observe scenes and people (not only, but also, themselves) with a self-subordinating concision, so much so that the term “minimalism” comes up in discussions of their work. . .The poets of the New Thing eschew sarcasm and tread lightly with ironies, and when they seem hard to pin down, it is because they leave space for interpretations to fit. . .The new poetry, the new thing, seeks, as Williams did, well-made, attentive, unornamented things. It is equally at home (as he was) in portraits and still lifes, in epigram and quoted speech; and it is at home (as he was not) in articulating sometimes harsh judgments, and in casting backward looks. The new poets pursue compression, compact description, humility, restricted diction, and—despite their frequent skepticism—fidelity to a material and social world. They follow Williams’s “demand,” as the critic Douglas Mao put it, “both that poetry be faithful to the thing represented and that it be a thing in itself.” They are so bound up with ideas of durable thinghood that we can name the tendency simply by capitalizing: the New Thing. . . Reference, brevity, self-restraint, attention outside the self, material objects as models, Williams and his heirs as predecessors, classical lyric and epigram as precedents: all these, together, constitute the New Thing.

Stephen Burt Harvard Professor Stephen Burt on His Life as a Girl VQR Online

Poets whom Burt claims "The New Thing" label fits include Rae Armantrout, Michael O'Brien, Justin Marks, Elizabeth Treadwell, and Graham Foust.

Writings

Stephen Burt Steph also Stephen and Stephanie Burt Poetry Foundation

In addition to his essays for the Boston Review, Burt has written for The New York Times Book Review, Poetry Review, Slate, The Times Literary Supplement, the London Review of Books, and the Yale Review.

He has a particular interest in the work of the poet/critic Randall Jarrell, and Burt's book Randall Jarrell and His Age reevaluates Jarrell's importance as a poet. The book won the Warren-Brooks Award in 2002. In explaining his book's aim, Burt wrote, "Many readers know Jarrell as the author of several anthology poems (for example, 'The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner'), a charming book or two for children, and a panoply of influential reviews. This book aims to illuminate a Jarrell more ambitious, more complex, and more important than that." In 2005, he also edited Randall Jarrell on W. H. Auden, a collection of Jarrell's critical essays.

In addition to writing about poets and poetry, Burt has published three books of his own poetry, Popular Music (1999), which won the Colorado Prize for Poetry, Parallel Play (2006) and Belmont (2013).

On occasion, he has been known to write for a popular audience on Slate and for The New Yorker, including an article about X-Men: Days of Future Past in the voice of Kitty Pryde.

Academic career

Burt earned a bachelor's degree from Harvard in 1993 and a Ph.D. from Yale in 2000 before joining the faculty at Macalester College, his first academic post, from 2000 to 2007. In 2007 he joined the teaching staff at Harvard University, where he became a tenured professor in 2010.

References

Stephen Burt Wikipedia