<p>Avant-Garde Pieties offers a sustained critique of the ideologies that fueled historical avant-garde formations, while proposing a method for rethinking the social energies and processes that animate contemporary poetic practice. Bettridge offers a perspective into what feminist theologian Catherine Keller refers to as an "apophatic" understanding, a relational ontology grounded in "disciplined uncertainty." Any U.S. American poetic design in "debate with itself about itself" will have engaged questions of ascendency vis-à-vis stateside exceptionalism, white supremacy, and racial violence. And embodied justice is the poetic response to failures of the overarching enterprises imagined by the historical avant-gardes. Bettridge writes from a situated perspective that makes visible his own commitments but without ever disavowing the self-entangled stakes of whiteness in the enabling stories that structure literary studies.</p><p>—Roberto Tejada, author of <i>Exposition Park</i> and <i>National Camera: Photography and Mexico’s Image Environment</i></p><p>This book establishes Bettridge as a go-to authority on the fraught contestation of innovation in poetry, and as an adroit critic of an unfolding terrain of formidable originality in current poetics. His focused, and reliable, attention to detail as well as the larger arcs of theoretical issues is commendable.</p><p>—Jed Rasula, author of <i>The American Poetry Wax Museum</i> and <i>Syncopations: The Stress of Innovation in Contemporary American Poetry</i></p><p>In <i>Avant-Garde Pieties: Aesthetics, Race, and the Renewal of Innovative Poetics</i>, Joel Bettridge makes an important intervention in debates regarding the formation and continuation of the avant-garde in the 21st century. He speaks particularly to poets, critics, and audiences of poetry engaged in controversies of race, economics, and social justice. By showing the social value and differences of perspective highlighted in contemporary poetic practice, Bettridge enhances our understanding of how the avant-garde can contribute to social change rather than again re-phrasing the now-exhausted formal strategies of defamiliarization that applied to earlier historical moments, but not to our own. He shows that the avant-garde is very much alive particularly in the way socially aware creative strategies can address the reality of our social circumstances today.</p><p>— Dale M. Smith, Ryerson University, Toronto</p>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Joel Bettridge is the author of two books of poetry, That Abrupt Here and Presocratic Blues as well as the critical study, Reading as Belief: Language Writing, Poetics, Faith. He co-edited, with Eric Selinger, Ronald Johnson: Life and Works. He is an Associate Professor of English at Portland State University.