philoctetesctr
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Poetry Scholars and Poet Critics
Roundtable discussion with Stephen Burt, Bonnie Costello, Heather Dubrow, Rachel Hadas, and Eric McHenry.
Переглядів: 6 485

Відео

Theories of Meaning and MotivationTheories of Meaning and Motivation
Theories of Meaning and Motivation
Переглядів 18 тис.13 років тому
Roundtable discussion with Emily Balcetis, Ned Block, Lawrence Friedman, and Edward Smith.
Wallace Stevens: Words That MatterWallace Stevens: Words That Matter
Wallace Stevens: Words That Matter
Переглядів 22 тис.13 років тому
Poetry reading and discussion with Susan Howe and Joan Richardson
Realism and Expressionism in the Work of Tennessee WilliamsRealism and Expressionism in the Work of Tennessee Williams
Realism and Expressionism in the Work of Tennessee Williams
Переглядів 6 тис.13 років тому
Roundtable discussion with Enoch Brater, Lee Breuer, Roger Copeland, Joe Jeffreys, Maude Mitchell, and Basil Twist.
The Origins of Norms: The Place of Value in a World of Nature IIThe Origins of Norms: The Place of Value in a World of Nature II
The Origins of Norms: The Place of Value in a World of Nature II
Переглядів 1,8 тис.13 років тому
Lectures by Anne Harrington and John Forrester.
What is Guilt?What is Guilt?
What is Guilt?
Переглядів 16 тис.13 років тому
Roundtable discussion with Donald Carveth, Marcia Cavell, Michael Eigen, Jay Greenberg, and Michael Lewis.
What is Imagination?What is Imagination?
What is Imagination?
Переглядів 7 тис.13 років тому
Roundtable discussion with Marcia Cavell, Harry Eyres, Rocco Landesman, Rick Moody, Edward Nersessian, Ned Rorem, and C.K. Williams.
Imaginative Problem SolvingImaginative Problem Solving
Imaginative Problem Solving
Переглядів 2,6 тис.13 років тому
Lecture by Oliver Turnbull.
Balthus and His MythsBalthus and His Myths
Balthus and His Myths
Переглядів 25 тис.13 років тому
Lecture by Nicholas Fox Weber.
Asking the EastAsking the East
Asking the East
Переглядів 1,3 тис.13 років тому
Music performance and discussion with Jane Ira Bloom, Samir Chatterjee, Jin Hi Kim, and Min Xiao-Fen.
Theories of EverythingTheories of Everything
Theories of Everything
Переглядів 10 тис.13 років тому
Poetry and NarrativePoetry and Narrative
Poetry and Narrative
Переглядів 7 тис.13 років тому
Poetry reading and discussion with Jonathan Culler, Heather Dubrow, Marilyn Nelson, Willie Perdomo, and James Phelan.
From Homer to 2011From Homer to 2011
From Homer to 2011
Переглядів 1,3 тис.13 років тому
The Limitation of Mental and Physical RealityThe Limitation of Mental and Physical Reality
The Limitation of Mental and Physical Reality
Переглядів 22 тис.13 років тому
Roundtable discussion with Gregory Chaitin, Joseph J. Kohn, Tim Maudlin, Edward Nelson, and Carol Rovane.
Living in the Musical Moment: Jazz GuitarLiving in the Musical Moment: Jazz Guitar
Living in the Musical Moment: Jazz Guitar
Переглядів 1,5 тис.13 років тому
Music performance and discussion with Lewis Porter and Ken Wessel.

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @icecreamforcrowhurst
    @icecreamforcrowhurst 2 роки тому

    @4:14 “I like to sit in a rocking chair on a porch and listen to birdsong” cellphone starts blasting. Hilarious irony! 😂

  • @Adrianomarino
    @Adrianomarino 2 роки тому

    non dice molto dei poeti metafisici!

  • @Adrianomarino
    @Adrianomarino 2 роки тому

    meravigliosa questa presentazione di John Donne

  • @ollen580
    @ollen580 2 роки тому

    49:36 Peter Quince at the Clavier I Just as my fingers on these keys Make music, so the self-same sounds On my spirit make a music, too. Music is feeling, then, not sound; And thus it is that what I feel, Here in this room, desiring you, Thinking of your blue-shadowed silk, Is music. It is like the strain Waked in the elders by Susanna: Of a green evening, clear and warm, She bathed in her still garden, while The red-eyed elders, watching, felt The basses of their beings throb In witching chords, and their thin blood Pulse pizzicati of Hosanna. II In the green water, clear and warm, Susanna lay. She searched The touch of springs, And found Concealed imaginings. She sighed, For so much melody. Upon the bank, she stood In the cool Of spent emotions. She felt, among the leaves, The dew Of old devotions. She walked upon the grass, Still quavering. The winds were like her maids, On timid feet, Fetching her woven scarves, Yet wavering. A breath upon her hand Muted the night. She turned-- A cymbal crashed, And roaring horns. III Soon, with a noise like tambourines, Came her attendant Byzantines. They wondered why Susanna cried Against the elders by her side; And as they whispered, the refrain Was like a willow swept by rain. Anon, their lamps' uplifted flame Revealed Susanna and her shame. And then, the simpering Byzantines, Fled, with a noise like tambourines. IV Beauty is momentary in the mind - The fitful tracing of a portal; But in the flesh it is immortal. The body dies; the body's beauty lives, So evenings die, in their green going, A wave, interminably flowing. So gardens die, their meek breath scenting The cowl of Winter, done repenting. So maidens die, to the auroral Celebration of a maiden's choral. Susanna's music touched the bawdy strings Of those white elders; but, escaping, Left only Death's ironic scrapings. Now, in its immortality, it plays On the clear viol of her memory, And makes a constant sacrament of praise.

  • @rievans57
    @rievans57 4 роки тому

    Miss Dubrow is delightful. She is a wonderful ambassador for poetry.

  • @davol2449
    @davol2449 4 роки тому

    my first day at the Graduate Center in 1973, I attended Mandelbaum's Modern Poetry course and was sitting next to Joan Richardson, who was so gorgeous, I was afraid to look at her....

    • @charlespeterson3798
      @charlespeterson3798 2 роки тому

      I have been in love with her for 50 years. Her voice broke my heart.

  • @brutecoan7975
    @brutecoan7975 4 роки тому

    Zzzzzzzzzzzz

  • @johnmartin2813
    @johnmartin2813 5 років тому

    A narrative can contain several stories. But a story cannot contain several narratives.

  • @rpsu2b
    @rpsu2b 6 років тому

    uberdriver & scratch-poet @rashaunps wuz here: mfa candidate 2019 @usfmfaw (silicon valley-sf, ca) 1 8 0 3 3 0

  • @rpsu2b
    @rpsu2b 6 років тому

    uberdriver & scratch-poet @rashaunps wuz here: mfa candidate 2019 @usfmfaw (silicon valley-sf, ca) 1 8 0 2 2 5

  • @purpledanny1958
    @purpledanny1958 7 років тому

    Am I alone in finding Susan Howe's talk obscure?

    • @BardSonic
      @BardSonic 2 роки тому

      Stevens poetry attracts academics like this one because they use his work to place themselves on stage, for attention, as interpreters. It is a chance for them to gather attention.

  • @ravenoversnow
    @ravenoversnow 7 років тому

    hmmm, While I understand why Joan Richardson shutdown Susan Howe, to then go on and talk without relief herself seems entirely unfair...perhaps I've misread the situation...

  • @TheLitLass
    @TheLitLass 7 років тому

    16:27 beautiful!

  • @petertaylor6628
    @petertaylor6628 8 років тому

    JLS see Ben waterstone for drink brand new book our story so far introduction photos of oritse willams marvin humes aston merrygold JB Benjamin gill see you on staurday 6th february 2016

    • @seberry1
      @seberry1 6 років тому

      Why is this here?

  • @windstorm1000
    @windstorm1000 10 років тому

    Stevens is 'da bomb'--the best 20th century poet with Robert Frost. By the way, Stevens had a bit of a temper--he got into fights with Hemingway and Frost (with the latter no doubt about realist vs. symbolist imagery). The imagery is bizarre--the best American poet dukin it out with the best American novelist. "Papa' won.

    • @davol2449
      @davol2449 6 років тому

      wait a minute...are you actually suggesting that Hemingway was in any way remotely the "best American novelist?" I hate to be rude, but, like, are you sure you can actaully READ??

    • @charlespeterson3798
      @charlespeterson3798 6 років тому

      Understand your own mind.

    • @rapier1954
      @rapier1954 5 років тому

      Temper fueled by booze.

    • @AllendeEtAl
      @AllendeEtAl 4 роки тому

      Stevens is magnificent but is not even the best american poet of the 20th Century. Ezra Pound goes first, followed by some.

  • @marjorybrogan738
    @marjorybrogan738 10 років тому

    Yes..To get her name wrong is a scandal..

  • @Bothfeetstink
    @Bothfeetstink 10 років тому

    Absolutely love some of these lectures...I'm stuck in the middle of nowhere, this is about the only intelligient conversation I encounter. Thank Gawd for the internet.

    • @bradleynichols4909
      @bradleynichols4909 2 роки тому

      Peter Crofts: I feel your pain. Thank you for putting voice to my own frustration.

    • @davemillar7543
      @davemillar7543 2 місяці тому

      Couldn't agree more.

  • @Dazbog373
    @Dazbog373 11 років тому

    "Poetry and narrative", and Jonathan Culler selects an exemplary LYRIC poem. Schoolboy error.

  • @martinezgerard
    @martinezgerard 11 років тому

    This is wonderful. Ponsot comments are so enlightening. She makes me feel her passion for reading poetry.

  • @michealjohn7192
    @michealjohn7192 11 років тому

    i love you

  • @xilix
    @xilix 11 років тому

    Or, maybe it's that you take too little time listening. This talk is over 1 1/2 hours long. That's how long it is - that's how long she will speak for. There's a video version of Twitter called 'Vine', you'd probably be much happier taking in the inane information there, as it only requires an attention span of 7 seconds.

  • @gwedielwch
    @gwedielwch 11 років тому

    Marvellous. ... deeply considered thoughts, beautifully constructed sentences, humour, tact, authority ... and such a warm and wonderful voice. Thank you.

  • @Krigarar
    @Krigarar 11 років тому

    The Apollonian and the Dionysian in Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy is anything BUT a dichotomy. It is a duplicity ("Duplizität", often mistranslated into English as "duality"). There is a huge difference, which is essential in understanding the whole concept.

  • @luba1441
    @luba1441 11 років тому

    51.12 (51.25)- Marie you LAD.

  • @cgStarling
    @cgStarling 11 років тому

    Hate the assholes interupting w/ their goddamn electronics! Could u be more fuckin rude?

    • @seberry1
      @seberry1 6 років тому

      Language is a gift, isn't it?

  • @PoetryETrain
    @PoetryETrain 12 років тому

    Thank you, this has been added to a playlist...

  • @michealjohn7192
    @michealjohn7192 12 років тому

    SHE TAKES TO LONG TO SPECK ANNOYING

    • @seberry1
      @seberry1 6 років тому

      Are you, like, over five years old?

    • @patrickkane3971
      @patrickkane3971 4 роки тому

      SPEED UP THE VIDEO LIKE EVERYONE ELSE.

  • @becauseican66
    @becauseican66 12 років тому

    I have an essay on forbidden mourning, one of my favorite poems :)

  • @mythof1
    @mythof1 12 років тому

    Chaitin puts them all to shame. He is so far ahead of this whole group. He is the only one who has shed his dogmas to open his mind.

  • @Celedonio_Firpo
    @Celedonio_Firpo 12 років тому

    embole!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @mikeyo1234
    @mikeyo1234 12 років тому

    He says "nearly infinite" at 6:36. Surely something is either infinite or it is not?

  • @archie977
    @archie977 12 років тому

    i want to join

  • @REALITY2point0
    @REALITY2point0 12 років тому

    @mebe84 OK.. 30 minutes and I find myself agreeing with theawakener7 so far, so THICK. more to follow when I've had a chance to watch the rest, but the evidence thus far is somewhat unpropitious..

  • @AAwildeone
    @AAwildeone 12 років тому

    So if it was all about IMMEDIACY and "writing on the lark", I suppose Shakespere is the boy to go with!

  • @Notawesomeatall7
    @Notawesomeatall7 12 років тому

    Awesome. I enjoyed this.

  • @PoetryETrain
    @PoetryETrain 12 років тому

    Thank you this has been added to our playlists here, and on facebook, :)

  • @hypVideo
    @hypVideo 12 років тому

    i must say the majority of commentators on youtube seem to be about 11 - 14 years old

  • @libs106
    @libs106 12 років тому

    this is superb, thank you very very much!

  • @BryanDraughn
    @BryanDraughn 12 років тому

    Are they in a janitor closet?

  • @22tomiz
    @22tomiz 12 років тому

    nem jo

  • @BloodWashed4Life
    @BloodWashed4Life 12 років тому

    In Hell, there is no air, every breath is a grasp, one never gets to feel that full satisfying fill of air rushing into ones lungs “take a deep breath, feel that beautiful feeling of the air rushing into your lungs” You don’t get to feel that in hell …how do I know there is no air in Hell ? Because God is the breath of life and there is no God in Hell !! God says he’ll mock them, they will grasp out it’s hot here God will reply it’s hot here !!

  • @JulienNeel
    @JulienNeel 13 років тому

    Thank you for this great talk. I loved math in school and college, and sure wish my teachers had had the time to portrait the people behind all the theory. School mathematics depicts only the final result of theory, not how people came up with it, made mistakes, how amazing the idea was at the time, etc. We take it all for granted and talks like this make it all come to life. Thanks!

  • @dlmlewis
    @dlmlewis 13 років тому

    Thanks for sorting out Dave Lehman's ancient Greek, JamBrop. Though Lehman's pronunciation of ancient Greek may not be as exemplary as yours, he does seem to know a thing or two about the lecture topic - WH Auden!

  • @seintzeit
    @seintzeit 13 років тому

    yawn. for thirty minutes...then bam.

  • @seintzeit
    @seintzeit 13 років тому

    yawn.

  • @Scream0Sn1pe
    @Scream0Sn1pe 13 років тому

    @Socksbike I envy you!! How come it wasn't the best of meetings?

  • @poetrhode
    @poetrhode 13 років тому

    One of my best philoctetes discussions. i listen to this over and over. it is rich and deep, well articulated by these experienced and well-versed poets. thanks a lot. my mind is like a child going to an amusement park.

  • @Jontor11
    @Jontor11 13 років тому

    For me, I find it difficult to find the true psychological message in this movie. Instead, I think it's all about Hitch's own relationship with women. He always had these divine platinum blond women in his films. And here we got his fantasy make-over of that woman, Madeleine (who never really existed), and he does it twice! The Midge charachter symbolizes more his wife perhaps? Hitch always treated the actors like props in a vision, and here Novak became that vision. The woman you'll never get.

  • @pawsoned
    @pawsoned 13 років тому

    Although I'm not a fan of poetry I enjoyed this discussion. Thank you very much for bringing such a wonderful panel. P.S.: Jonathan Culler is amazing. I've never seen him before, but only read his books. He's great.

  • @pawsoned
    @pawsoned 13 років тому

    imo a biography is akin to a dictionary definition conveying the meaning of another word. It's just an image or representation aka a simulacrum that may capture some essential qualities of the person but never entirely her self. More interesting is the effort of autobiography but it's also flawed inasmuch as the author/character is bound to verbalize her entire being and to squeeze it into a narrative form detached from reality by being steeped in the author's subjective viewpoint. Great talk <3