Pages: 94
          
                              
            ISBN: 9780819568137
          
                              
            Pub Date: March 2006
          
                                                            
                                          Imprint: Wesleyan University Press
                                    
                              
                Price:
      
                £18.50
            
  
          
          
          
                          In stock
                      
        
            Pages: 94
          
                              
            ISBN: 9780819568496
          
                              
            Pub Date: December 2007
          
                                                            
                                         Imprint: Wesleyan University Press
                                    
                              
              Price:
      
                £11.95
            
  
          
          
          
          
                                          This book will be reprinted and your order will be released in due course.
              
                      
        
          Description:
      
      
        Elizabeth Willis's new collection is a stunning collision of the pastoral tradition with the politics of the post-industrial age. These poems are allusive and tough. While they celebrate the pleasures of the natural world-mutability, desire, and the flowering of things-they are compounded by a critical awareness of contemporary culture. As we traverse their associative leaps, we discover a linguistic landscape that is part garden, part wilderness, where a poem can perform its own natural history. Divided into four cantos interrupted by lyrics and errata, Meteoric Flowers mirrors the form of Erasmus Darwin's 18th-century scientific pastorals. In attending to poetry's investigative potential, Willis shifts our attention from product to process, from commodity to exchange, from inherited convention to improvisational use.
      
            
        Elizabeth Willis's new collection is a stunning collision of the pastoral tradition with the politics of the post-industrial age. These poems are allusive and tough. While they celebrate the pleasures of the natural world-mutability, desire, and the flowering of things-they are compounded by a critical awareness of contemporary culture. As we traverse their associative leaps, we discover a linguistic landscape that is part garden, part wilderness, where a poem can perform its own natural history. Divided into four cantos interrupted by lyrics and errata, Meteoric Flowers mirrors the form of Erasmus Darwin's 18th-century scientific pastorals. In attending to poetry's investigative potential, Willis shifts our attention from product to process, from commodity to exchange, from inherited convention to improvisational use.