Context Collapse: A Poem Containing a History of Poetry

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Product Details
Price
$15.95  $14.83
Publisher
Seven Stories Press
Publish Date
Pages
96
Dimensions
5.9 X 7.9 X 0.8 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781644214237
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
RYAN RUBY is a critic, novelist, and translator from French. He is the author of The Zero and the One: A Novel (Twelve Books, 2017) and his criticism has appeared in the New York Times, The Nation, POETRY, The Believer, The Point, and the New Left Review. He is the recipient of the 2019 Albert Einstein Fellowship from the Einstein Forum in Potsdam, and the Robert B. Silvers Prize for Literary Criticism. He currently teaches creative writing at the Berlin Writers' Workshop.
Reviews
"Ryan Ruby has written a daring kind of essay. The verse text and verse footnotes conflate and flail, destabilizing and stylizing one another like conjoined twins." --Don Mee Choi, author of DMZ Colony

"Context Collapse is an erudite and a perceptive essay in the form of a poem, which traces the history of poetry from ancient orality to the electronic age. Using both the line and the footnote in a self-referential and sophisticated performance, it argues that what poetry is depends on the economic, social and technological conditions of its production." --Eugene Ostashevsky, author of The Feeling Sonnets

"It seems impossible that Context Collapse is as wildly erudite and incredibly fun as it is. What a grand survey of poetry, in poetry! I'm envious of Ryan Ruby for succeeding so brilliantly with this bold and cheeky (and frankly insane) project." --Lauren Groff, author of The Vaster Wilds

"Reader! In this book, you are sitting for a family portrait. Ryan Ruby has written a poem of poetry's audience, from first song by firelight to the cool blue of the computer screen. The story he tells is learned, witty, bright with shards of lyric; a surreptitious media theory by turns elegiac and inspiring. You will see your self here, and we can see each other, and all of us can remember how good it gets when humans pay attention to what humans make." --Jeff Dolven, author of Senses of Style and *A New English Grammar

"With perverse, provocative persistence, Ryan Ruby shores a fragmentary history of the ancient technology of poetry against its modern ruins. Poetry's audience, he argues, is hastily going the way of all flesh--a context that renders his Herculean labor futile. How, then, does Ruby manage to make his verse essay so very compelling? What does its propulsive power and persuasiveness tell us not only about what poetry can do, but also about ourselves? These are the stimulating and, indeed, pressing questions posed by Context Collapse, an ars poetica like no other." --Boris Dralyuk, author of My Hollywood

"What a joy it is to think alongside Ryan Ruby. In Context Collapse, critical argument and literary history become sensuous and playful, provocative in the best sense and, by the end, deeply moving." --Phil Klay, author of Redeployment

"An epic on the history of poetry may seem an unlikely project, but this delightfully witty (and erudite) romp through poetry and its technologies works up to a sobering, urgent, apocalyptic conclusion."--Rosmarie Waldrop, The Nick of Time

"Literary critic Ruby (The Zero and the One) delivers a dazzling and ambitious "verse essay" tracing the history of poetry from Homer through the present. He begins with early Greek poetry performances, where audiences didn't seek to interpret the poet's words so much as "judge the skill with which they are sung." In medieval times, poetry was usually composed by court troubadours and performed by jongleurs (itinerant entertainers), Ruby explains, discussing how troubadours developed increasingly complicated rhyme schemes to make it difficult for "unscrupulous" jongleurs to introduce their own changes. Elsewhere, Ruby describes how poets attempted more sophisticated literary techniques after the 15th-century invention of the printing press, which enabled readers to spend more time parsing texts; how modernists wrote thematically dense verse in hopes of inspiring enough scholarly exegesis to keep their names alive after their deaths; and how a contemporary overabundance of poets makes it appear that most poems are read by few and culturally irrelevant. Ruby's effortless synthesis of artistic, cultural, and technological developments makes him an excellent historical guide, and the verse essay format--consciously modeled on the argumentative poetry of Parmenides and Alexander Pope, among others--proves a novel reading experience. This literary history stands in a class all its own." --Publisher's Weekly, STARRED REVIEW