This section contains 289 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
[There] is an almost total absence of human sympathy [in Tread the Dark], of concern for others' suffering. The poems are utterly solipsistic, outgrowths of a single, self-conscious, meditating sensibility…. (p. 469)
Over the years, Ignatow has worked to become a kind of poet of the people, in the tradition of Whitman and Williams. In order to carve out his own territory, Williams had to attack the elitism and intellectualism of Eliot—and a refreshing attack it was. Ignatow has a poem here directed against the elitist and Platonic concept of "perfect form" in poetry. He makes some telling points—unless you are an upright citizen, stolidly middle-class, white, prosperous, you do not belong in the poetry of perfect forms…. The great American writers have almost always been rebels and outcasts, shaggy, writing poems and novels in a clearly imperfect form.
I sympathize. But this is an elitist book...
This section contains 289 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |