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Peter Middleton

Aftermath

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Biographical note:  Peter Middleton was born in 1950 and grew up in both England and the United States. After a first degree at Oxford University, he took a PhD at Sheffield University, and studied for a year at SUNY Buffalo with Robert Creeley and Jack Clarke. He is the author of a book on masculinity, The Inward Gaze (1992) and (with Tim Woods) Literatures of Memory: History, Time and Space in Postwar Writing (2000). A book of essays on performance, readership, and consumption in contemporary poetry is forthcoming. His poetry and essays have appeared in magazines in the UK and US, and he is an editor of Torque Press. After lecturing at several universities and polytechnics, he is now a Reader in English at the university in Southampton, England, where he lives with his partner Kate, and children George and Harriet.

 

BIC Basic

EAN13:  9781876857639
ISBN-10:  1876857633
ISBN-13:  9781876857639
Author:  Peter Middleton
Title:  Aftermath
Series:  Salt Modern Poets
Product class:  BC
Language:  eng
Audience:  General/trade
BIC subject category:  CTCH1
Publisher:  Salt Publishing
Pub date:  01-Jul-03
Extent:  188pp
Height:  216 mm
Width:  140 mm
Thickness:  11 mm
Weight:  282 gms
Supplier:   Gardners Books
Supplier:   Ingram Book Group
Supplier:   Inbooks (James Bennett)
Availability:  IP
Price:  GBP 11.99
Price:  USD 17.95
Rights:  World

 

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spacer Short description/annotation:  A selection of poems about masculinity, memory, authority and science. Languages of science and policy try to talk their way out of poetic trouble in serial poems and longer sequences. Past and future, America, Greece, and conservative Britain, are all scenes of action.

 

Main description:  Aftermath brings together several long poems concerned with masculinity, authority, and the politics of art, alongside a selection of shorter poems curious about science, memory and new technology, written over a twenty year period. Many of the poems search out traces of narrative and emotion in the often anonymous and neutralised languages of contemporary culture. This is an investigation prompted by the restricted civic space and cultural possibilities of a conservative Britain. Earlier poems were written in the shadows of a conservative roll-back of many progressive government programmes and a rapid increase in poverty and decline in education and health. This was also a time when poststructuralism persuasively mocked humanist and transcendental ideas about language. Was there any truth or hope in language? This is a poetry with arguments, a conviction, challenged at every turn, that observation and communication are still possible for the stretched language of poems. Included are two recent sequences, ‘Tell Me About It’ and ‘Next Gen,’ in which the selves called into being by New Labour and New Technology aspire to their own lyric sublime. The concluding poem, A Dialogue on Anachronism, looks back on the past two decades with some wonder and puzzlement.

 

Table of contents:
Equations
First Thought
Here Is A Clue
Spare Explanations
Many People Do Not Like The Idea That Time Has A Beginning
To the Lifeworld
Forefathers
Romantic Gallery
Theory 2
Against Interpretation
Divided by a Common Language
City Life
A Bomb’s Eye View
Tell Me About It
The Poetics Of Labour
Put Yourself In Their Place
Another Dispatch
Escapist Western
Here We Report
Fire Works
Poetry For Dummies
Finding A Voice
In the Mottram Archive
I Left A Little Of Myself Behind In That Novel
Such Theory Looks Like Advocacy
The Unsayable
Blaming The Sixties
New Human Abstract
One
The West In Pictures
Deep Time
Cognitive Mapping
Sing Me
Believe It Or Not
Predictive Curves
A Sonnet And A Half For Ted Berrigan
It’s A Crime
It Is All Our Story
Front Line Epic
The Trouble With Metaphors
Eat Sleep Work
Based On The Classic Novel
Pump-Priming The Economy
After The DNA Code Was Broken
Persuasion
The Eagle Book Of Imperial Poetry
That Turner Prize Bed
Some Syllables Are Missing in this Elegy
The Personal Poem
Time Team
Cinematics Of Memory
Paternalisms
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Next Gen
1/Civil society
2/Lyric moments
3/Political subjects
4/Drives
5/The new anthropology
6/They bring us words for our poetry
7/Beyond Vision
8/Dogs, Dragons and Tygers
9/Online enchantments
10/The Sonnet
11/Poet and critic
12/The body
Expressions
Californium 98
Mendelevium 101
Fall Out Shelter
Up Above the Moral World
High-Heel Boots
Charles Olson
Intravention
I Feel Your Pain
Topologies
Portrait Of An Unknown Man
Sacred Object Purpose Unknown
A Dialogue on Anachronism
Afterword
Notes

 

View excerpt as PDF:

PDF Click here to view a sample (68 KB)

 

Excerpt from book:  

Deep Time

Biodiversity is a pig if you eat anything,
though not because of the Ordovician
extinction’s unmissed clams, and no one
notices Devonian losses, it’s the Cretaceous
that trembles the genes. Your body belongs
to them, yet dares talk back to say skein
of ozone, as if the genre could handle it.

These corrugated speculations roof
the end of an era, lithograph deposition.
Snout in the fossils I doubt the paleos
have any idea what the will consumes
when millenia work the same line.
Edenic species historicise first,
timed out by deforestation estimates.

Pink rounds of protoplasm whirling out
from a tube of gut, straining into formal
dress (biological drawdown), staring
across the millenia with a slash and burn
aesthetic. What has evolved into the
truest sentience, left behind as stores
by retreat of the ice. Fossil hunger.

 

Review quote:  The waltz of the intellect among the words opens onto a world of misplaced politics in the aftermath of desire’s collision with history. Peter Middleton’s muted songs spook this tale of the trying.

Charles Bernstein

 

Review quote:  This is a learnéd group of texts in dispute with itself, that questions itself and its reader as part of its production. Peter Middleton is an engaged academic, but in public he, as this collection demonstrates, is a considerable poet with direct responses to scientific and ecological practices, uses language as a material, works on an interface between what, on the one hand, he once named the male inward gaze and, on the other, its vulnerable surface. His interface shifts from narrative to cusping disquiet, from crafted conversation to directed poetry.

Allen Fisher

 

Review quote:  This Middleton poem is formally innovative; it does not spill, every line has elastic on it and snaps back.

Ira Lightman
Pages

 

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