Other Traditions

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A01=John Ashbery
alternative poetry
Author_John Ashbery
avant-garde poetry
Category=DS
Charles Olson Selected Writings
Elizabeth Bishop Geography III
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experimental poetry
forgotten poets
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literary analysis
literary appreciation
literary diversity
literary engagement
literary history
literary insight
literary interpretation
literary legacy
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literary mentorship
literary obscurity
literary reading
literary recovery
literary technique
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modernist poetry
Norton lectures
poetic analysis
poetic craft
poetic criticism
poetic difficulty
poetic experimentation
poetic expression
poetic form
poetic influence
poetic innovation
poetic language
poetic legacy
poetic lineage
poetic obscurity
poetic tradition
poetic voice
poetry and philosophy
poetry criticism
poetry techniques
poetry theory
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780674302440
  • Weight: 341g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Sep 2025
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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“An entertaining and shrewd little book … Ashbery is an accomplished raconteur.” —Charles Simic, New York Review of Books

The most influential American poet of his generation appraises the lesser-known writers who shaped his own confounding, infinitely inventive work.

John Ashbery was the quintessential “difficult poet.” When asked to explain his work, he typically responded by insisting that his poetry was its own explanation. Fittingly, then, when he was invited to deliver the Norton Lectures at Harvard in 1989, Ashbery declined to spell out what he put on the page. Instead, he offered rapt audiences a tour of his influences, the authors he turned to as a “jumpstart for times when the batteries have run down.”

The poets in Ashbery’s personal canon—John Clare, Thomas Lovell Beddoes, Raymond Roussel, John Wheelwright, Laura Riding, and David Schubert—were all tragic figures in their own way, plagued by mental illness or poverty, ridiculed or barely recognized in their own lives, and in some cases, all but forgotten today. More importantly for Ashbery, each wrote poetry that somehow defies the reader. Clare’s sometimes-monotonous naturalism, Roussel’s exhausting maze of parenthetical clauses, and Wheelwright’s eccentric Anglican mysticism do not invite casual reading. But under Ashbery’s tutelage, we experience the idiosyncratic brilliance of these “other traditions,” discovering how they shaped not only Ashbery’s poetics but also the broader trajectory of twentieth-century literature, from surrealism to New Criticism.

With inimitable charm, wit, and erudition, the lectures collected in Other Traditions elevate the imperfect and peculiar, affirming the literary virtues of Ashbery’s difficult predecessors. The result is a revealing self-portrait of one of the giants of American poetry, if only through a convex mirror.

John Ashbery (1927–2017) was the author of more than twenty books of poetry, including Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror, which won the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. He received dozens of other awards and honors, including the MacArthur Foundation Fellowship, the National Humanities Medal, and every major American poetry prize. Stephanie Burt is the author of fourteen books of poetry and literary criticism, including Super Gay Poems. A past judge for the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, she serves as a board member of the National Book Critics Circle, is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, and writes regularly for the New York Times Book Review, the New Yorker, the London Review of Books, the New York Review of Books, Raritan, and other publications. She is the Donald P. and Katherine B. Loker Professor of English at Harvard University.

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