Eight poetry collections published in the past four years turn to the beast as an alternative way of inhabiting the world. This beastly turn has ontological, political, and aesthetic implications for how we theorize the relationship between poetry and personhood (and all of its Enlightenment-era baggage). This review explores both the impetuses and outcomes of these beast-filled encounters but stops short of offering a grand theory of “the beast,” as such a move would undermine the motivating reasons for embodying and embracing beasts as kin.
poetics
The New Formalism of ‘Anthropocene Inscriptions’: A Poetics of the Record
The V21 Collective (Victorian Studies for the 21st Century) kindly published this non-Victorianist’s response to their recent special issue in Boundary2. Specifically, I respond to Jessee Oak Taylor’s piece “Anthropocene Inscriptions: Reading Global Synchrony”.
“A poetics of this material dynamism might be articulated as lower limit stone / upper limit air.That is to say, literary forms mediate ecological crisis via multiple scales and materialities—climate change is not inaccessible, as some have argued, but merely illegible when we confine our investigation to any single literary period.”
Read my full response here