Glück, Louise - Peter Stitt (essay date 1981)
Peter Stitt (essay date 1981)
SOURCE: "Purity and Impurity in Poetry," in The Georgia Review, Vol. XXXV, No. 1, Spring, 1981, pp. 182-89.
[Stitt is an American educator and critic. This excerpt from a review of Descending Figure classifies Glück's work as "pure poetry," which Stitt defines as verse that is more concerned with superficial qualities of structure and technique than with the intellectual or emotional core of poetic experience.]
Among many other things, there is pure poetry, there is impure poetry, and there is everything in between. The pure poem is exclusive, attends tea parties, breathes rarified air; the impure poem is democratic, tends to drink too much, revels in ribald stories. The impure poem is anxious to get everything in; the pure poem is concerned to leave most things out. The poetic age, the one in which we live, seems especially concerned to get everything in—every possible kind of poet and poetry, that...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Robert Boyers (essay date 1969)
- Anna Wooten (essay date 1975)
- Helen Vendler (essay date 1978)
- Peter Stitt (essay date 1981)
- Calvin Bedient (essay date 1981)
- Robert Miklitsch (essay date 1982)
- Louise Glük (1985)
- Burton Raffel (essay date 1988)
- Lynn Keller (essay date 1990)
- Calvin Bedient (essay date 1991)
- Bruce Bond (essay date 1991)
- Charles Berger (essay date 1991)
- Lynne McMahon (essay date 1992)
- Helen Vendler (essay date 1993)
- Stephen Yenser (essay date 1994)
- Emily Gordon (essay date 1996)
- Vijay Seshadri (essay date 1996)
- Further Reading
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