• Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
  • red color
Member Area

A 'n' E Vibe

Wednesday
Jul 09th
Home arrow MUSIC REVIEWS arrow PHYLLIS WEBB & THE COMMON GOOD - Stephen Collis (poetry/anarchy/abstraction)
PHYLLIS WEBB & THE COMMON GOOD - Stephen Collis (poetry/anarchy/abstraction) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Deborah Ground Buckner   

phyllis_webb_and_the_common_good.jpgBook Title:  Phyllis Webb and the Common Good:  Poetry/Anarchy/Abstraction

Author:  Stephen Collis

Publishing Company:  Talonbooks (www.talonbooks.com)

Year:  2007

# of Pages: 228

ISBN #:  978-0-88922-559-6

$24.95 Canada

$24.95 USA 

3 Stars 

Reviewer:  Deborah Ground Buckner 

Poet and critic Stephen Collis (Anarchive, 2005; Mine,2001), explores the work and life of Phyllis Webb in his new book Phyllis Webb and the Common Good.  Webb was born in 1927 in Victoria, British Columbia.  She worked at the CBC in Toronto and produced the radio show "Ideas." Between 1956 and 1990, Webb published nine volumes of poetry.  Her work, The Vision Tree:  Selected Poems by Phyllis Webb, won the Governor General's award in 1982.

Collis traces Webb's work in the context of her life.  He draws a comparison to the life and work of Emily Dickinson, mainly because of the temptation of critics, particularly with women poets, to engage in “psychobiography,” attempting to analyze the writer through her work.  He notes Webb herself objected to this in a 1993 essay, proclaiming the poet “become[s] a sociological phenomenon whose secret life has become an almost more dramatic gift than the poems.”   

Collis focuses on three areas of discussion.  The first is “The Poetics of Response.  Webb readily acknowledges the influences of other poets in her work.  Webb wrote of her reason for writing, “there are the poems,” both her own works and the works of others, poems, as Collis states, “to which Webb can respond in kind and enter into dialogue with.”  Poetry is, in fact, a “response-ability,” Collis writes.

The second area is “Poetry and Anarchy.”  Again, examining Webb's works in the context of her times and the other poets she had read, Collis concludes her work “embodies the tension between . . . two anarchist poles,” these being “the individualist and communist strains.”

The third area of focus is “On Abstraction.”  Considering Webb's decision to stop writing and begin painting, Collis seeks to find “a bridge backwards, eventually reading her painterly abstraction back into her poetry.”  Collis argues “the tendency towards abstraction is the key trajectory of Webb's literary career . . . but a more fully abstract poetry was, for whatever reasons, unavailable, or simply unappealing.”  (author's emphasis).  Ultimately, it is through her painting that she can more fully explore abstraction, and the book includes some illustrations of her artistic work. 

Phyllis Webb and the Common Good is a very scholarly work, steeped with academic writing that makes it a difficult read.  It is worth the effort, though.  So often, poets are thought of in isolation, so it is particularly interesting to see the analysis of a poet in the context of the world that shaped her.

 
< Prev   Next >
 

Mamma Mia! Trailer. July 18th release date. Official Website

Login Here

DIGG IT? 
A 'n' E Vibe wants to know which articles you Digg. At the bottom of reviews & articles you can find the Digg It symbol. If you loved what you read, let others know about it!


CONGRATULATIONS!
charles
Ohio, USA
books1.jpg
A 'n E VIBE Prize Pack WINNER!
 
Register with AnEVibe
to win Contests,Prize Packs & More!

TOP FICTION: Week Of July 7th

1. FEARLESS FOURTEEN, by Janet Evanovich
2. SAIL, by James Patterson and Howard Roughan
3. TAILSPIN, by Catherine Coulter
4. ROGUE, by Danielle Steel
5. THE HOST, by Stephenie Meyer
 

stone_angel_ver2.jpg

  NEW FILM RELEASES

WEEK OF JULY 7th

1. The Stone Angel                2. Journey To The Center Of The Earth
3. Hancock
4. Meet Dave

coldplay_viva_la_vida.jpg

TOP ALBUMS

WEEK OF JUNE 30th

1. Coldplay 'Viva La Vida'

2. Camp Rock 'Soundtrack'

3. Lil Wayne 'Tha Carter III' 

4. Offspring 'Rise & Fall, Rage & Grace''

5. Disturbed 'Indestructible'

mandela_lg.jpg
Nelson Mandela turns 90! 
  Hyde Park in London (England) was host to the 46664 AIDS/HIV charity event to both celebrate the heroes birthday, and  promote awareness of his charity named after the number he was gave for his 27 year socially unjust prison sentence on Robin Island (South Africa). July 18th welcomed the `big stars`from Will Smith (who hosted), to attendees Oprah, and Uma (Thurman) the event had `Birthday Bash`wrote all over it. The performers list was endless, such as Annie Lennox, and Josh Groban who both gave delightful tributes to Mandela`s legacy.