by David McCooey •
When people complain about ‘postmodernism’ in poetry, they are usually, for all their talk of form and technique, strangely indifferent to its intense aestheticism. The disruptions of syntax, use of indeterminacy, tonal disjunctions, obtruse formalism, and intertextuality are types of decorativeness, instruments of ornamentation. For all that Language poets and others press their political case, pleasure is the guilty secret of postmodern poetry.
From the New Issue
Letters
A Life in Letters: A new light on Simone Weil by Robert Chevanier and André A. Devaux, translated from French by Nicholas Elliott
by Scott Stephens
History
The Shortest History of Turkey: A candid examination by Benjamin C. Fortna
by Hans-Lukas Kieser
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