Poems in the World: The Ecopoetics of Anne Waldman’s <i>Life Notes</i>

This essay argues that Anne Waldman’s 1973 selected poems, <i>Life Notes</i>, articulates a vision of the environment that is positively and reparatively enmeshed with language and culture. Embracing the paradox at the heart of the best environmental writing, <i>Life Notes</i>...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rona Cran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-03-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/10/1/50
Description
Summary:This essay argues that Anne Waldman’s 1973 selected poems, <i>Life Notes</i>, articulates a vision of the environment that is positively and reparatively enmeshed with language and culture. Embracing the paradox at the heart of the best environmental writing, <i>Life Notes</i> reveals our natural environments to be at once legible and unknowable, and embodies this through experimental forms, language, and typography. This collection of poems, which has yet to be paid significant critical attention (despite Waldman’s renowned status as a poet), artfully mediates the relationship between word and world, giving voice, shape, and form to what we might call the poet’s ‘ecology of knowing’, per Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s formulation. Through a sustained process of imaginative elision of the human and nonhuman, I argue, Waldman illuminates the ways in which the ‘natural’ world is almost always touched by the human, and refutes the widely-held cultural fantasy that nature is self-evidently restorative or redemptive and thereby somehow at a remove from humankind. <i>Life Notes</i>, I suggest, is a ‘dissipative structure’, critically entangled with the everyday environment out of which it emerges and with which it remains ‘involved in a continual exchange of energy’ (Waldman).
ISSN:2076-0787