Tag Archives: Document

Jacquelyn Ardam on Gertrude Stein

Our very first M/ELT presenter was UCLA graduate student Jacquelyn Ardam who went on to publish her paper, ”Too Old for Children and Too Young for Grown-ups”: Gertrude Stein’s To Do: A Book of Alphabets and Birthdays,  in the journal Modernism/modernity.

melt-poster_web

Unfortunately, it’s behind a firewall (academic subscribers can get access to it through ProjectMUSE where an excerpt is available to non-subscribers). I’m sure we can find a way to get you this if you are really interested.

Interview with Daniel Tiffany

The Conversant speaks to USC Poet and Professor Daniel Tiffany about his latest book, Neptune Park.

Neptune-Cover-200x300-Pixel-RGB

Andy Fitch: In Neptune Park’s epigraph, Strabo, the Roman geographer, declares, “I shrink from giving too many of the names, shunning the unpleasant task of writing them down—unless it comports with the pleasure of someone.” I’m interested in the role preemptive or productive apology plays in your poetics. Who are some of your favorite apologizers? Robert Walser comes to mind, perhaps Joe Brainaird.

Daniel Tiffany: I haven’t thought this through carefully, whether Strabo’s statement suggests strategic calculation or an embarrassed admission. I like the way he doesn’t just apologize for the obscurity of certain names and places but acknowledges his hope of “comporting” with someone’s pleasure. I appreciate an apologetics qualified by the hope that someone out there just might want to hear terribly dull things. I also love Strabo’s way of cataloging obscure places, tribes, peoples he has heard or read about—almost as an obligation, from a sense of duty.

Daniel Tiffany with Andy Fitch