Resistance to Science in Contemporary American Poetry
English

About The Book

<p>This book examines types of resistance in contemporary poetry to the authority of scientific knowledge tracing the source of these resistances to both their literary precedents and the scientific zeitgeists that helped to produce them. Walpert argues that contemporary poetry offers a palimpsest of resistance using as case studies the poets Alison Hawthorne Deming Pattiann Rogers Albert Goldbarth and Joan Retallack to trace the recapitulation of romantic arguments (inherited from Keats Shelly and Coleridge which in turn were produced in part in response to Newtonian physics) modernist arguments (inherited from Eliot and Pound arguments influenced in part by relativity and quantum theory) and postmodernist arguments (arguments informed by post-structuralist theory e.g. Barthes Derrida Foucault with affinities to arguments for the limitations of science in the philosophy sociology and rhetoric of science). Some of these poems reveal the discursive ideologies of scientific language—reveal in other words the performativity of scientific language. In doing so these poems themselves can also be read as performative acts and therefore as forms of intervention rather than representation. Reading Retallack alongside science studies scholar Karen Barad the book concludes by proposing that viewing knowledge as a form of intervention rather than representation offers a bridge between contemporary poetry and science.</p>
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