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Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge

Autor(a) de I Love Artists: New and Selected Poems

18+ Works 406 Membros 4 Críticas 1 Favorited

Obras por Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge

Nest (2003) 47 exemplares
Empathy (1989) 44 exemplares
A treatise on stars (2020) 44 exemplares
Hello, the roses (2013) 36 exemplares
Endocrinology: poetry (1997) 32 exemplares
Sphericity (1993) 31 exemplares
Four Year Old Girl (1998) 29 exemplares
The Heat Bird (1974) 28 exemplares
Concordance (1687) 23 exemplares
Summits Move with the Tide (1974) 9 exemplares
Random Possession (1979) 8 exemplares
Mizu 1 exemplar
Plant Poems 1 exemplar
Hiddenness 1 exemplar
Pack rat sieve 1 exemplar

Associated Works

The Forbidden Stitch: An Asian American Women's Anthology (1989) — Contribuidor — 66 exemplares
The Ecopoetry Anthology (2013) — Contribuidor — 48 exemplares
HOW(ever), Vol. V, No. 2, January 1989 — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Críticas

Sometimes a work will just hit you, right book, right time. Had to take my time with this one because each line was so concentrated. Peeling the layers like a bomb disposal technician - getting your mind blown - slowly expanding shockwaves - being tugged across the blurred dimensions - through light and dark - sound and imagination. Going to have to gift myself this from a nearby indie shop. Loved it.
 
Assinalado
kevinyezbick | Mar 18, 2021 |
Berssenbrugge, like so many poets of her generation, investigates perception; also the relationships among world (matter); image (thought, art)and symbol(word,name). Early on, her poetry becomes discursive, long-lined; almost prose. It concerns itself with light, color, landscape, bodies, shadows, in short, artists' materials. I like the floating almost fog-like consciousness of many of the poems collected here (indeed, one poem is titled Fog); they permeate, insinuate but don’t exactly locate or substantiate. In many ways, the exact opposite or complement of mathematical precision, yet steeped in notions of biology, geology, and astrophysics. Her poetry has an astronomical ambiance. It floats between earth and sky, always located elsewhere yet coming to ground. In a way, it resembles light itself, neither here nor there but transiting through, moving onwards and outwards, away, never returning unless reflected (in the mirror). Memory also plays an important role in Berssenbrugge's poetry, but hers is not a journalistic memory that records experience but rather memory as the agency that holds the world intact (in an image).
Another of Berssenbrugge’s preoccupations is space, its arrangement and ordering; the eye’s rearrangement of space; also the spatial (and thus, emotional) relations between one thing and another. Where something is placed or occurs is consequential, since it determines or at least affects how the eye of the I “sees” it. Space and perspective affect the intensity, dimension and proximity of thoughts/emotions.
Intriguingly, Berssenbrugge’s poetry manages to be ungraspable (and in this, quasi-hallucinatory) yet, at the same time, grounded and material. Although I often have no idea what her poems exactly mean, a phrase will engender a notion or an experience in my mind, so that in some indefinable way, I know what she’s talking about.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Paulagraph | 1 outra crítica | May 25, 2014 |
 
Assinalado
nerval | Feb 23, 2009 |
Empathy's the real book of serendipity (Univ. of Arizona library), but this has a nice chunk of Empathy in it.
 
Assinalado
mdh | 1 outra crítica | Jul 23, 2007 |

Prémios

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Estatísticas

Obras
18
Also by
7
Membros
406
Popularidade
#59,889
Avaliação
4.1
Críticas
4
ISBN
27
Marcado como favorito
1

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