Slips of the Mind

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A01=Jennifer Soong
Abstraction
Aesthetics
Ambiguity
Author_Jennifer Soong
Avant-garde
Category=DSC
Category=JN
Causality
Cognition
Composition
Concept
Consciousness
Contemporary
Creativity
Difference
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Experimentation
Generative
Genre
Gertrude Stein
Identity
Influence
Innovation
Intentionality
Interpretation
John Ashbery
Language
Literary theory
Lyn Hejinian
Malleable
Memory
Modern
Overdetermination
Perception
Poetics
Postmodernism
Principle
Resistance
Style
Subjectivity
Surprise
Technique
Writing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226839905
  • Weight: 313g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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An audacious account of what happens when forgetting becomes a way of writing and writing becomes a way of forgetting.

In Slips of the Mind, poet and critic Jennifer Soong turns away from forgetting's longstanding associations with suppression, privation, and error to argue that the absence or failure of memory has often functioned as a generative creative principle. Exploring forgetting not as the mere rejection of a literary past or a form of negative poetics, Soong puts to the test its very aesthetic meaning. What new structures, forms of desires, styles, and long and short feelings do lapses in time allow? What is oblivion's relationship to composition? And how does the twentieth-century poet come to figure as the quintessential embodiment of such questions?

Soong uncovers forgetting's influence on Gertrude Stein, Lyn Hejinian, Tan Lin, Harryette Mullen, Lissa Wolsak, and New York School poets John Ashbery, James Schuyler, Bernadette Mayer, and Ted Berrigan, among others. She reveals that forgetting's shapeshifting produces differences in poetic genre, interest, and degrees of intentionality—and that such malleability is part of forgetting's nature. Most provocatively, Soong shows how losing track of things, leaving them behind, or finding them already gone resists overdetermination and causality in the name of surprise, as poets leverage forgetting in order to replace identity with style. Slips of the Mind is the kind of literary criticism that will reward all readers of modern and contemporary poetry.

Jennifer Soong is a poet, literary critic, and assistant professor of English and Literary Arts at the University of Denver. She is the author of several books of poetry, including Comeback Death, Suede Mantis / Soft Rage, and the forthcoming My Earliest Person.

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