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Stephanie Burt on Allan Peterson ("I thought all life came from the alphabet")

Stephanie Burt on Allan Peterson ("I thought all life came from the alphabet")

FromClose Readings


Stephanie Burt on Allan Peterson ("I thought all life came from the alphabet")

FromClose Readings

ratings:
Length:
83 minutes
Released:
Jan 22, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Very few scholars have as much enthusiasm for poetry as Stephanie Burt, and so it was a  delight to have her back for this episode. Steph has been in the news of late for offering a (very popular) course at Harvard on Taylor Swift, and we begin this episode by talking in fascinating ways about the long history of the relation between popular music and poetry. And then we move on to this episode's poem, Allan Peterson's marvelous "I thought all life came from the alphabet." Peterson was a new poet to me, and I was totally won over by Steph's framing of him as a poet of science, of intellect, and of fun. This is a poet thinking in surprising ways about the match and mismatches between the world as we find it and the consciousness with which we receive it. He is, in that sense, an epistemological poet, but also at his core a naturalist, a poet whose mind grows in relation to the world he describes.Stephanie Burt is the Donald P. and Katherine B. Loker Professor of English at Harvard University. Her most recent book of poems is We Are Mermaids (Graywolf, 2022) and her most recent book of criticism is Don't Read Poetry: A Book About How to Read Poems (Basic Books, 2019). You can follow her on Twitter.Please follow, rate, and review the podcast if you're enjoying it. Share it with a friend! And subscribe to my Substack, where you'll get occasional updates on the pod and my other work.
Released:
Jan 22, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (49)

One poem. One guest. Each episode, Kamran Javadizadeh, a poetry critic and professor of English, talks to a different leading scholar of poetry about a single short poem that the guest has loved. You'll have a chance to see the poem from the expert's perspective—and also to think about some big questions: How do poems work? What can they make happen? How might they change our lives?