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Translations from Bark Beetle
21st
A01=Jody Gladding
animals
art
Author_Jody Gladding
Category=DCF
collection
contemporary
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
experience
great salt lake
human
humanity
landscape
language
milkweed books
milkweed editions
natural world
nature
objects
place
poems
poet
poetry
translated
twenty-first century
wildlife
works in translation
Product details
- ISBN 9781571314550
- Weight: 127g
- Dimensions: 215 x 139mm
- Publication Date: 29 May 2014
- Publisher: Milkweed Editions
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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In this inspired new collection, acclaimed poet and translator Jody Gladding takes the physical, elemental world as her point of inquiry, examining how language arises from landscape, and deriving a lexicon for these poems from the rich offerings of the world around her. In some poems, Gladding steps into the role of translator, interpreting fragments left by bark beetle or transcribing raven calls. In others, poems take the form of physical objects -- a rock, split slate, an egg, a feather -- or they emerge from a more expansive space -- a salt flat at the Great Salt Lake, or a damaged woodlot. But regardless of the site, the source, or the material, the poet does not position herself as the innovator of these poems. Rather, the objects and landscapes we see in Translations from Bark Beetle provide the poet with both a shape and a language for each poem. The effect is a collection that reminds us how to see and to listen, and which calls us to a deeper communion -- true collaboration -- between art and the more-than-human world.
Jody Gladding's most recent poetry collection is Rooms and Their Airs (Milkweed Editions, 2009). Her translations include Jean Giono's Serpent of Stars and Pierre Michon's Small Lives. She has been a Yale Younger Poet, Stegner Fellow at Stanford, Poet-in-Residence at The Frost Place, and has received a Whiting Writers' Award and Centre National du Livre de France Translation Grants. Her work includes site-specific installations that explore the interface of language and ecology. She teaches at Vermont College of Fine Arts and lives in East Calais, VT.
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