Conversations with Stanley Kunitz

"He again tops the crowd--he surpasses himself, the old iron brought to the white heat of simplicity." That's what Robert Lowell said of the poetry of Stanley Kunitz (1905-2006) and his evolving artistry. The interviews and conversations contained in this volume derive from four decades of Kunitz's distinguished career. They touch on aesthetic motifs in his poetry, the roots of his work, his friendships in the sister arts of painting and sculpture, his interactions with Lowell and Theodore Roethke, and his comments on a host of poets: John Keats, Walt Whitman, Randall Jarrell, Wallace Stevens, and Anna Akhmatova.

Kunitz emerged from a mid-sized industrial town in central Massachusetts, surviving family tragedy and a sense of personal isolation and loneliness, to become an eloquent spokesman for poetry and for the power of the human imagination. Kunitz has commented, "If we want to know what it felt like to be alive at any given moment in the long odyssey of the race, it is to poetry we must turn." His own odyssey from "metaphysical loneliness" to a sense of community with fellow writers and artists--by building institutions like Poets House and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts--is ever present in these interviews.

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Conversations with Stanley Kunitz

"He again tops the crowd--he surpasses himself, the old iron brought to the white heat of simplicity." That's what Robert Lowell said of the poetry of Stanley Kunitz (1905-2006) and his evolving artistry. The interviews and conversations contained in this volume derive from four decades of Kunitz's distinguished career. They touch on aesthetic motifs in his poetry, the roots of his work, his friendships in the sister arts of painting and sculpture, his interactions with Lowell and Theodore Roethke, and his comments on a host of poets: John Keats, Walt Whitman, Randall Jarrell, Wallace Stevens, and Anna Akhmatova.

Kunitz emerged from a mid-sized industrial town in central Massachusetts, surviving family tragedy and a sense of personal isolation and loneliness, to become an eloquent spokesman for poetry and for the power of the human imagination. Kunitz has commented, "If we want to know what it felt like to be alive at any given moment in the long odyssey of the race, it is to poetry we must turn." His own odyssey from "metaphysical loneliness" to a sense of community with fellow writers and artists--by building institutions like Poets House and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts--is ever present in these interviews.

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Conversations with Stanley Kunitz

Conversations with Stanley Kunitz

by Kent P. Ljungquist (Editor)
Conversations with Stanley Kunitz

Conversations with Stanley Kunitz

by Kent P. Ljungquist (Editor)

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Overview

"He again tops the crowd--he surpasses himself, the old iron brought to the white heat of simplicity." That's what Robert Lowell said of the poetry of Stanley Kunitz (1905-2006) and his evolving artistry. The interviews and conversations contained in this volume derive from four decades of Kunitz's distinguished career. They touch on aesthetic motifs in his poetry, the roots of his work, his friendships in the sister arts of painting and sculpture, his interactions with Lowell and Theodore Roethke, and his comments on a host of poets: John Keats, Walt Whitman, Randall Jarrell, Wallace Stevens, and Anna Akhmatova.

Kunitz emerged from a mid-sized industrial town in central Massachusetts, surviving family tragedy and a sense of personal isolation and loneliness, to become an eloquent spokesman for poetry and for the power of the human imagination. Kunitz has commented, "If we want to know what it felt like to be alive at any given moment in the long odyssey of the race, it is to poetry we must turn." His own odyssey from "metaphysical loneliness" to a sense of community with fellow writers and artists--by building institutions like Poets House and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts--is ever present in these interviews.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781628468106
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Publication date: 11/18/2013
Series: Literary Conversations Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 234
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Kent P. Ljungquist, Jefferson, Massachusetts, is a professor of English at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. He is the editor of Antebellum Authors in New York and the author of The Grand and the Fair: Poe's Landscape Aesthetics and Pictorial Techniques.

Table of Contents

Introduction ix

Chronology xx

Pulitzer Prize Poet Stanley Kunitz Started Career in Worcester Margaret Parsons / 1960 3

Communication and Communion: A Dialogue between Stanley Kunitz and Allen Tate Allen Tate / 1966 8

The Poet in the Classroom Robert Russell / 1967 20

Presenting the Poet: Stanley Kunitz Richard Kostelanetz / 1969 29

An Interview with Stanley Kunitz Candace DeVries Olesen / 1972 39

Stanley Kunitz on "The Science of the Night" Adele Slaughter / 1974 45

Interview with Stanley Kunitz Cleopatra Mathis Anne Cherner Elmaz Abinader / 1977 50

Poetry in the Classroom: A Symposium with Marvin Bell, Donald Hall, and Stanley Kunitz Alan Loxterman / 1977 57

Stanley Kunitz: Action and Incantation Harvey Gross / 1978 76

An Interview with Stanley Kunitz: University of Virginia Alumni News / 1980 90

Stanley Kunitz on the Labyrinth of Forms and the Turning of Worms Kathleen Weldon Rose Slivka / 1981 93

A Dialogue with Stanley Kunitz Ayappa Paniker/1982 99

Interview: Stanley Kunitz Madeleine Beckman / 1982 115

An Interview with Stanley Kunitz Peter Stitt / 1990 123

Stanley Kunitz: An Interview Leslie Kelen / 1991 139

Stanley Kunitz: "The Gifts of the Heart Are Always Added to Our Store" Christopher Busa / 1992 155

An Interview with Stanley Kunitz Donald G. Parker Joan I. Siegel/1993 165

An Interview with Stanley Kunitz Gary Pacernick / 1995 178

Openhearted: Stanley Kunitz and Mark Wunderlich in Conversation Mark Wunderlich / 1997 188

The Productions of Time: Kunitz on Blake Jason Shinder / 2000 194

Index 217

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