2013 November: James Merrill Special Issue at Contemporary Poetry Review https://www.cprw.com Resuscitating Poetry Criticism Fri, 10 Aug 2018 01:48:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 James Merrill’s “The Friend of the Fourth Decade” https://www.cprw.com/james-merrills-the-friend-of-the-fourth-decade https://www.cprw.com/james-merrills-the-friend-of-the-fourth-decade#respond Tue, 15 Apr 2014 20:10:08 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3939 David Kalstone, a longtime professor of English at Rutgers University and, prior to that, at Harvard, was one of James Merrill’s closest friends. An expert on Sir Philip Sidney, Kalstone extensively studied 20th-century Americans as well; his second book Five Temperaments (1977) included a chapter on Merrill along with Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Lowell, Adrienne Rich and John Ashbery.… continue reading...

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The Unstiflement of the Story: James Merrill’s “The Broken Home” https://www.cprw.com/the-unstiflement-of-the-story-james-merrills-the-broken-home https://www.cprw.com/the-unstiflement-of-the-story-james-merrills-the-broken-home#comments Fri, 11 Apr 2014 15:18:22 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3934 James Merrill3

“The Broken Home” is a sequence of seven sonnets that appeared in Merrill’s 1966 volume Nights and Days. The sonnets are connected by imagery, themes and autobiography, concerning, as they do, two central issues: the trauma of Merrill’s parents’ divorce and the poet’s own incomplete or “broken” childless home.continue reading...

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James Merrill: “After Greece” https://www.cprw.com/james-merrill-after-greece https://www.cprw.com/james-merrill-after-greece#comments Thu, 10 Apr 2014 19:42:34 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3931 merrill2The young James Merrill first saw Greece in 1950 as part of a two-and-a-half-year long European tour, a trip he would later detail in his memoir A Different Person.… continue reading...

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Regaining the Depths: James Merrill’s “Pearl” https://www.cprw.com/regaining-the-depths-james-merrills-pearl https://www.cprw.com/regaining-the-depths-james-merrills-pearl#comments Tue, 07 Jan 2014 17:31:07 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3903 James Merrill’s final book of poems, A Scattering of Salts, was written in his last years as his health was in steady decline after having been diagnosed with HIV.… continue reading...

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James Merrill’s Geode Sonnet: Crystal Queer https://www.cprw.com/james-merrills-geode-sonnet-crystal-queer https://www.cprw.com/james-merrills-geode-sonnet-crystal-queer#respond Fri, 13 Dec 2013 21:41:53 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3899 Merrill scholarship has been undergoing a sea change, apparently mirroring a larger societal change. What among scholars even in the 1990s could but delicately speak its name, now does so frankly.… continue reading...

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“Losing the Marbles”: Merrill and Sophrosyne https://www.cprw.com/losing-the-marbles-merrill-and-sophrosyne https://www.cprw.com/losing-the-marbles-merrill-and-sophrosyne#respond Mon, 02 Dec 2013 22:48:06 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3880 James Merrill has given us the birth-myth of his poem, “Losing the Marbles.” After decades of spending his winter months in Athens, Greece, Merrill wintered instead in Key West, where, in 1985,

“… we were talking about memory lapses, a topic increasingly relevant to everyone present.

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Techne in Textiles: Merrill’s “Investiture at Cecconi’s’” https://www.cprw.com/techne-in-textiles-merrills-investiture-at-cecconis https://www.cprw.com/techne-in-textiles-merrills-investiture-at-cecconis#comments Thu, 21 Nov 2013 22:51:29 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3875 In “Investiture at Cecconi’s,” James Merrill weaves a beautiful, sapphic fabric whose warp and weft intertwine chiaroscuro threads of fate, epiphany, beauty, and death as the expression of an initiation into the realm of living with and dying from AIDS.… continue reading...

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“A Window Fiery-Mild”: The Role of Venice in The Book of Ephraim https://www.cprw.com/a-window-fiery-mild-the-role-of-venice-in-the-book-of-ephraim https://www.cprw.com/a-window-fiery-mild-the-role-of-venice-in-the-book-of-ephraim#comments Fri, 08 Nov 2013 20:53:16 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3856 The Book of Ephraim is a very “literary” work and perhaps never more so than in its Venetian sections (V and W). It is my contention that Section V (the letter V, not the Roman numeral) constitutes not only a major turning-point in the work, but also a significant declaration of Merrill’s literary aims.… continue reading...

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Satire & Dysfunction: James Merrill’s “Family Week at Oracle Ranch” https://www.cprw.com/satire-dysfunction-james-merrills-family-week-at-oracle-ranch https://www.cprw.com/satire-dysfunction-james-merrills-family-week-at-oracle-ranch#respond Thu, 07 Nov 2013 21:18:56 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3865 “Family week at Oracle Ranch” is a portrait of dysfunction. It’s a poem written later in Merrill’s life, appearing in his final book, A Scattering of Salts, published by Knopf in 1995, the same year that Merrill died (February 6, 1995).… continue reading...

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James Merrill Special Issue: An Introduction https://www.cprw.com/james-merrill-special-issue-an-introduction https://www.cprw.com/james-merrill-special-issue-an-introduction#respond Thu, 07 Nov 2013 21:07:26 +0000 http://www.cprw.com/?p=3852 James Merrill is one of those poets whom everybody (well, everybody in the literary world) knows but whom few have read—or, at least, few have read at length or in depth.… continue reading...

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