The Astonishment Tapes(English, Paperback, Blaser Robin)

The Astonishment Tapes(English, Paperback, Blaser Robin)

  • Blaser Robin
Publisher:University of Alabama PressISBN 13: 9780817358099ISBN 10: 0817358099

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The Astonishment Tapes(English, Paperback, Blaser Robin) is written by Blaser Robin and published by The University of Alabama Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0817358099 (ISBN 10) and 9780817358099 (ISBN 13).

The Astonishment Tapes is the edited transcript of revealing autobio-graphical audiotapes recorded by the groundbreaking poet Robin Blaser, a founding member of the Berkeley contingent of the San Francisco Renaissance in New American Poetry. Robin Blaser moved from his native Idaho to attend the University of California, Berkeley, in 1944. While there, he developed as a poet, ex-plored his homosexuality, engaged in a lively arts community, and met fellow travellers and poets Robert Duncan and Jack Spicer. The three men became the founding members of the Berkeley core of what is now known as the San Francisco Renaissance in New American Poetry. In the company of a small group of friends and writers in 1974, Blaser was asked to narrate his personal story and to comment on the Berke-ley poetry scene. In twenty autobiographical audiotapes, Blaser talks about his childhood in Idaho, his time in Berkeley, and his participation in the making of a new kind of poetry. The Astonishment Tapes is the ex-pertly edited transcript of these recordings by Miriam Nichols, Blaser's editor and biographer. In The Astonishment Tapes Blaser comments extensively on the poetic principles that he, Duncan, and Spicer worked through, as well as the differences and dissonances between the three of them. Nichols has edited the transcripts only minimally, allowing readers to make their own interpretations of Blaser's intentions. Sometimes gossipy, sometimes profound, Blaser offers his version on the inside story of one of the most significant moments in mid-twenti-eth century American poetry. The Astonishment Tapes is of considerable value and interest, not only to readers of Blaser, Duncan, and Spicer, but also to scholars of the early postmodern and twentieth-century American poetry.