Milton Public Library

The ideal city, Rhodri Windsor Liscombe

Label
The ideal city, Rhodri Windsor Liscombe
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The ideal city
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Rhodri Windsor Liscombe
Series statement
Vancouver Working Group discussion paper
Summary
Robert Dickerson has crafted poetry for some forty years and by his own admission, is not exactly a beginner. His pen has produced several volumes-worth of verse. He celebrates the formal and cultivates the science of poetry, though he believes the degree of spiritual refi nement in the voice distinguishes the poet. His poems revel in the concrete and he believes in the poem as object. He advocates a natural voice, the primacy of the idea and the translation of the ordinary. His ethic insists that, mathematics aside, all that passes for truth in human affairs is rooted in need and tribal belief. He welcomes the return to poetry of transparency and design and prefers a poetic of mood and word magic to a poetry of politics. In his view, a poem is a joke whose punch-line yields enlightenment. He avoids the confessional mode as being too full of itself . To learn the craft of poetry he recommends practice and constant alertness to poetic possibility. He also recommends reading the greats
Target audience
adult
resource.variantTitle
World Urban Forum 2006
Classification
Contributor
Content

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