Oppen, George - Alan Golding (essay date 1988)
Alan Golding (essay date 1988)
SOURCE: “George Oppen's Serial Poems,” in Contemporary Literature, The University of Wisconsin Press, Vol. 29, No. 2, Summer, 1988, pp. 220-40.
[In the following essay, Golding argues that the disjunctive structure of Oppen's poems represents a formal expression of the central concerns of his poetry: disconnected relationship and the foregrounding of individual words.]
George Oppen is often discussed as if he were a kind of miniaturist, preoccupied with the small, the particular, the concrete detail. Readers note how modest his ambitions seem, how he writes mostly short poems capturing what he calls “moments of conviction” (“George Oppen” 174), how he pays fiercely focused attention to, in his own words, “the small nouns.” Certainly this view is not wrong, and Oppen himself, both in his poetry and in interviews, does much to invite it. He summarizes his ambitions as follows in “Route”:...
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Criticism
- Ezra Pound (essay date 1934)
- William Rose Benet (essay date 1934)
- William Carlos Williams (review date 1934)
- Denise Levertov (essay date 1963)
- Donald Davie (essay date 1973)
- Paul Zweig (essay date 1973)
- Kevin Powers with George and Mary Oppen (interview date 1975)
- Cid Corman (review date 1976)
- John Taggart (essay date 1979)
- Alan Young (essay date 1980)
- Cid Corman (essay date 1981)
- Harvey Kail (essay date 1981)
- David McAleavy (essay date 1981)
- Norman M. Finkelstein (essay date 1981)
- Andrew Crozier (essay date 1984)
- Michael Heller (essay date 1985)
- Alan Golding (essay date 1988)
- Burton Hatlen (essay date 1993)
- Cauthen Cramer (essay date 1994)
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