[New-Poetry] Buddy Wakefiled was 100 Poets You Should Know
Jason Quackenbush
jfq at myuw.net
Fri Nov 23 14:20:23 EST 2007
Well if he's flown under your radar then let that stop now:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=EweFcBdD1zo
http://youtube.com/watch?v=tIr4pL9P0SA&feature=related
http://youtube.com/watch?v=zL0y2WR0wZs&feature=related
http://youtube.com/watch?v=zL0y2WR0wZs&feature=related
http://youtube.com/watch?v=3W1U_zotSFo
JforJames at aol.com wrote:
> Certainly the list is subjective, an visibilty is based on one line of
> sight. The list is an invitation, for those so moved, to suggest and
> lobby for other choices, as you have. Also, 100 is an arbitrary round
> number. Could easily balloon to 105, 1120,,,
>
> I think my choices of Bob Holman and Patricia Smith are good ones for
> the performance vein of American poetry. Wakefield has flown under my
> radar; but Algarin makes sense to me. Berrigan, Eshleman, Rothenberg,
> Padgett, all good choices for the Jason 100.
> Finnegan
>
> In a message dated 11/22/2007 12:16:37 AM Eastern Standard Time,
> jfq at myuw.net writes:
>
> It's an interesting point. The question I'd like to ask you is
> visible
> to whom? If you're talking about contemporary performance poetry,
> they
> don't get much more visible than Buddy Wakefield or Miguel
> Algarin. Tom
> Raworth, while not particularly visible on this side of the
> atlantic, is
> more visible in Great Britain than I think a number of the people on
> your list are. I'll withdraw the suggestion though and in his place
> offer Jim Carroll: the only living american poet of import to have
> penned a alternative rock anthem; one that still gets airplay on
> independent "underground" and alternative radio. Plus there was a
> movie
> about him, which is something you can't say about Jorie Graham, thank
> Christ. I didn't notice this was an american list. As for
> anthologies, I
> think it depends on whose anthologies you read. I don't know for
> sure,
> but I'd be willing to bet Clayton Eshleman and Jerome Rothenberg have
> more anthologies between them, both as editors and as poets and
> translators than a good portion of your list combined. Anselm
> Berrigan,
> aside from being brilliant and a blood heir to the New York School
> also
> is still the director of the Poetry Project at St. Mark's Place,
> which
> as far as I know is the longest running spoken word series on the
> east
> coast.
>
> As for Ron Padgett, true, he's maybe not the most visible figure
> and is
> maybe an emotional choice. but nevertheless he's one of the few poets
> I've ever memorized, and I think I probably own more anthologies that
> he's in than I do anthologies that Maya Angelou is in. But then, I
> don't
> generally buy THOSE kind of anthologies. So yeah, I guess he can
> go too.
> Still, i think he's a poet everyone should know.
>
> Nothing in that drawer
>
>
>
>
>
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