Ep 3: Poetry is the worst
NB: I hesitated to release this one because I worried that the tone (and sound quality) at times comes off as a little harsh, but I still think it’s a pretty fun episode, and I figure if you’ve listened this long, then you already have some idea of how prickly I am. So, fuck it. Enjoy!
Some of the topics mentioned in this episode:
– Baudelaire's mom
– Midlife malaise
– Ben Lerner's book The Hatred of Poetry and my in retrospect maybe overly mean review of same
– Object permanence
– Adam Kirsch's essay "On 'Getting' Poetry"
– Ryan Wilson's essay "How to Think like a Poet"
– Rupi Kaur
– Acquired vs. unacquired tastes
– The hermeneutic circle
– Sex vs. masturbation
– Modernism and its discontents
– T. S. Eliot's essay "Tradition and the Individual Talent" (Yes, I realize that in this episode I deride the Poetry Foundation for being basically useless and now I’m linking to yet another essay which they’ve helpfully posted on their website. I may have overstated my case.)
– Jorge Luis Borges' essay "Kafka and His Precursors"
– Vers libre vs. free verse vs. doggerel
– Matthew Arnold’s poem “Dover Beach”
– T. S. Eliot’s poem “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”
– Coventry Patmore’s poem “A Farewell”
– Ryan Wilson’s wonderful unmetrical sonnets and their unfortunate appellation
– John Ashbery
– Fenton Johnson's poem "Tired"
– David Yezzi's essay, "These Are the Poems, Folks"
– Stephen Hawking's Penthouse subscription
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Music by ETRNL
Art by Daniel Alexander Smith