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Refrains/Unworkings,Used
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Poetry. LGBT Studies. REFRAINS/UNWORKINGS is Paul Foster Johnson's first book of poetry. Juxtaposing Romantic ideology against a postmodern disregard for "found" or "authentic" meaning, where "everybody's ontological investigation/ is guided by anticipated findings," these poems explore the social space of sound and rhythm and rhetoric. These are love poems, too, paeans so private and so simultaneously public, they evoke a contemporary return to Hart Crane's White Buildings. Yet, the speaker here resists the totalities of lyric history and their familiar arguments of selfhood: Romantic Man of Taste, revenant noisemaker of the New York School, vatic observer of the Republic, gay poet. Every new utterance is already oldalready within limiting quotation marks. Johnson's clever answer to the problem is a complex recapitulation and revision of lines, phrases, sounds, and images, where even entire movements of a poem are "refrained" but recontextualized in later poems. Nowhere is this more evocative than in the bookends of REFRAINS/UNWORKINGS. In the first poem, "Rhythmicon," there is only the voice "without anchor," a "birdsong of institutional being," a voice wherein art is without purpose even while the urban bourgeoisie search for new theories of art. In the last poem, "Art of the Cities," the same sentences of "Rhythmicon" form new lines within the context of polis and sociuspost9/11 New York Citywhere new construction ultimately leads to monumentally empty glass buildings and memorials to grief, perseverance, and failure.
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