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         Graham Jorie:     more books (84)
  1. Materialism by Jorie Graham, 1993
  2. The Muse in the Body: Love Poems by Women
  3. Dream of the Unified Field: Selected Poems 1974-1994 by Jorie Graham, 1995
  4. Overlord: Poems (ISBN: 0060745657) by Jorie Graham, 2005-01-01
  5. The New Yorker, July 14, 1997 "That Greater Than Which Nothing" by Jorie Graham, 1997-01-01
  6. Ploughshares, vol.27, no. 4 by Jorie edited by Graham, 2001
  7. Incarnation: 9:30 am to 9:36 am.(Poem): An article from: Daedalus by Jorie Graham, 2006-06-22
  8. Ploughshares, Winter 2001-02, Vol. 27, No. 4
  9. Region der Un�hnlichkeit by Jorie Graham, 2008
  10. The End of Beauty. by Jorie. Graham, 1987
  11. Region of Unlikeness: Poems. by Jorie. GRAHAM, 1991
  12. Lines/ Lignes Reflexions/ Reflections by Richard; Hollander, John; Graham, Jorie; Gregor, Debora; McClatchy, J. D. ; & Rosanna Warren Howard, 1996
  13. Hybrids of Plants and of Ghosts -SIGNED by Jorie Graham, 1980
  14. Crazyhorse 20, Poetry And Fiction by Edith; Wylder, Delbert - Managing Editors; Poetry Editor - Graham, Jorie; Fiction Editor - Porter, Joe Ashby Wylder, 1980

41. The Connection.org : Time, Tides And Jorie Graham
Time, Tides and jorie graham. jorie graham (photo by Jim Harrison) Email to friend,Poets are not tame. That’s what the poet jorie graham tackles, all that is.
http://www.theconnection.org/shows/2002/05/20020531_b_main.asp
Arts and the War
Do the arts have any role to play during the Iraz war? Or are they simply...
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CALL 1 800-423-TALK Time, Tides and Jorie Graham
Jorie Graham (photo by Jim Harrison)
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Poets are not tame. The good ones are writers who push, and probe, and say “Look! See what’s in front of your eyes.” Those poets don’t try to make things pure and pretty. They want us to see what is. That’s what the poet Jorie Graham tackles, all that is. She looks at the universe, and at life on earth, and the possibility that it’s all, that we’re all hurtling toward extinction. So she stops. And she makes us look more closely at the crab-tracks, at the algebraic rivulets of sand, and the experience of feeling all that is, in and underneath every moment of life. Jorie Graham, once dubbed by the The New Yorker as “the closest thing American poetry has to a rock star.”

42. The Connection.org : Time, Tides And Jorie Graham (Rebroadcast)
Time, Tides and jorie graham (Rebroadcast). jorie graham (photo by Jim Harrison)Email to friend, Poets are not tame. jorie graham reads from High Tide listen.
http://www.theconnection.org/shows/2002/12/20021230_b_main.asp
Arts and the War
Do the arts have any role to play during the Iraz war? Or are they simply...
Posted by: Bill Marx
#Hour# #Title# On the Horizon: Monday
Jacques Chirac
George Washington On Yesterday: Operation Iraqi Freedom
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Archived programs are streamed in the Real Audio Format.
Click here to download
Hosted by: Dick Gordon Show Originally Aired: 12/30/2002
CALL 1 800-423-TALK Time, Tides and Jorie Graham (Rebroadcast)
Jorie Graham (photo by Jim Harrison)
Email to friend
Related Links Never: Poems Recent Arts and Entertainment Shows Amandla! Fighting Music The Dante Club Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra ... Hesitation Willard Grant Conspiracy: Everything's Fine When I Look At The World U2: All That You Can't Leave Behind Boston University and WBUR . All rights reserved.

43. Boston Review | Bonnie Costello Reviews Jorie Graham
Bonnie Costello's review.Category Arts Literature Authors G graham, jorie......The Errancy jorie graham The Ecco Press, $22 jorie graham's subject, in this impressivenew volume, is desire and the error it inevitably leads us into.
http://bostonreview.mit.edu/BR22.5/costello.html
The Errancy
Jorie Graham
The Ecco Press, $22 by Bonnie Costello Jorie Graham's subject, in this impressive new volume, is desire and the error it inevitably leads us into. In our restless urge to form and fail and reform, in our apparent glimpses of utopia, we are heroically human. Poetry is not, for Graham, a place to relax.
Then the cicadas again like kindling that won't take.
The struck match of some utopia we no longer remember
the terms of
how she wants to be legible, how the light streaking her shades
now grows vermilion
which she would capture of course, because that, she has heard,
from the rumourous diamond-dust, is what is required,
as also her spiritnow that it has been swallowed like a lustrous hailstone by her unquenchable bodysuggests the zero at the heart of the christened bonfire . . . what has awakened which we thought we'd extinguished, us still standing here sword in hand, hand extended . . . aren't we going to close the elaborate folder which holds the papers in their cocoon of possibility, the folder so pretty with its massive rose-blooms

44. "Underneath": Poem By Jorie Graham
organized around a radiant absence. In His dance the people do not move. JorieGraham. Copyright Boston Review, 19932002. All rights reserved.
http://bostonreview.mit.edu/BR23.2/graham.html
Underneath (9)
Spring
Up, up you go, you must be introduced.
You must learn belonging to (no-one)
Drenched in the white veil (day)
The circle of minutes pushed gleaming onto your finger.
Gaps pocking the brightness where you try to see in.
Missing: corners, fields,
completeness: holes growing in it where the eye looks hardest.
Below, his chest, a sacred weightless place and the small weight of your open hand on it.
And these legs, look, still yours, after all you've done with them. Explain the six missing seeds. Explain muzzled. Explain tongue breaks thin fire in eyes. Learn what the great garden-(up, up you go)-exteriority, exhales: the green never-the-less the green who-did-you-say-you-are and how it seems to stare all the time, that green, until night blinds it temporarily. What is it searching for all the leaves turning towards you. Breath the emptiest of the freedoms. When will they notice the hole in your head (they won't). When will they feel for the hole in your chest (never).

45. The Errancy By Jorie Graham - R A I N T A X I O N L I N E
The Errancy. jorie graham. Ecco Press ($22). by Eric Lorberer. erhapsa summing up is in order jorie graham's first two books, with
http://www.raintaxi.com/online/1997fall/errancy.shtml
Vol. 2 No. 3, Fall 1997 (#7) The Errancy Jorie Graham Ecco Press ($22) by Eric Lorberer erhaps a summing up is in order: Jorie Graham's first two books, with their deftly spun yet tightly reined poems, introduced her as a poet of immense lyric capabilities. Her third book, The End of Beauty , exploded the very idea of lyric wide open, scattering it into myriad fragments that Graham meticulously tracked down over long-lined, cubistic poems that relentlessly questioned their own existence. Graham pursued this strategy further in her two subsequent volumes, which added to her explorations of mythological detritus a sustained examination of historical consciousness. Boldly facing down the ur-texts of western civilization, the latter of these books, Materialism , nearly collapsed under the weight of large remnants of philosophical and other writings that had been stitched to her own concerns. At this point, perhaps, a summing up was in order, and Graham's selected poems, The Dream of the Unified Field , gave the poetic establishment its least controversial shot at awarding her the Pulitzer Prize. As a whittled down history of her career to date, the book indeed deserves the accolade; it shows the development of a poet not content to write elegant verses, but one who would rather smash atoms together and attempt to describe the results.

46. LRB | Jorie Graham
If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB clickhere. Quick Search. LRB contributors jorie graham. jorie graham.
http://www.lrb.co.uk/contribhome.php?get=grah01

47. LRB | Jorie Graham : Four Poems
email_icontell a friend. Four Poems. jorie graham. This article isnot currently available online. If you would like to purchase the
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v23/n13/grah01_.html
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Subscribers to the LRB currently get free access to the full content of the magazine in an online edition. If you are a subscriber and would like to register for online access click here If you are already registered you can log in from our login page If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB click here LRB Vol. 23 No. 13 dated 5 July 2001 Jorie Graham tell a friend
Four Poems
Jorie Graham
This article is not currently available online. If you would like to purchase the back issue containing this article (if available) please click here Jorie Graham , who teaches at Harvard, is the author of eight volumes of poetry, including The Dream of the Unified Field , which won a Pulitzer Prize in 1997. A new collection will appear next year. Other articles available from the 5 July 2001 issue Waves of Wo
Colin Burrow
on George Gascoigne Little Mercians
Ian Gilmour
on why Kenneth Clarke should lead the Tories The Tax-and-Spend Vote
Ross McKibbin
wonders whether the election will improve New Labour's grasp on reality Long live the codex
John Sutherland
: the future of books At the National Gallery
Peter Campbell
: Vermeer and de Hooch Short Cuts
Thomas Jones
: the biography of stuff HOME SUBSCRIBE LOGIN CONTACTS ... privacy

48. Jorie Graham
photo photo jorie graham is currently on the faculty of the Writers'Workshop at the University of Iowa. She is the recipient of
http://www.poetry.org/issues/issue1/alltext/cngra.htm
    JORIE GRAHAM is currently on the faculty of the Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa. She is the recipient of a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship as well as the Morton Dauwen Zabel Award from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. Her most recent collection Dream of the Unified Field Selected Poems was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in poetry.
poetry interview table of contents essay ...
Electronic Poetry Review
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49. The Poetry Of Jorie Graham. December 17, 1999. The Connection With Christopher L
jorie graham. The Poetry of jorie graham. December 17, 1999. It was like something, jorie graham says, being played in the key my soul recognized. .
http://archives.theconnection.org/archive/1999/12/1217b.shtml
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Jorie Graham The Poetry of Jorie Graham.
December 17, 1999. Jorie Graham is a poet and an evangelist for Poetry-for the discipline and difficulty, the recurrent despair of the poetry-making process, for the now-and-then discovery of visible means of revealing invisible truth. She also loves to bear witness to the liberating and transformative thrill of other people's poetry. From that moment in film school 30 years ago when she heard in a hallway a fragment from T. S. Eliot: "I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each. I do not think that they will sing to me," Eliot wrote. "It was like something," Jorie Graham says, "being played in the key my soul recognized." She has written, taught and advocated poetry ever since-and preached the force that has rippled, burned, danced, clenched, raged, argued, persuaded and generally exploded through one remarkable language over a thousand years or so. Pulitzer prize winner Jorie Graham 's case for poetry in the second hour of the Connection.

50. Jorie Graham
Swarm jorie graham (Ecco/Harper Collins) The American poet jorie graham, the criticstell us, can be compared to TS Eliot, Emily Dickinson, and ee cummings.
http://www.ralphmag.org/AA/jorie-graham.html
Swarm
Jorie Graham
(Ecco/Harper Collins)
The American poet Jorie Graham, the critics tell us, can be compared to T. S. Eliot, Emily Dickinson, and e. e. cummings. A reviewer in the Post-Dispatch said that Graham's style "is so personal that the poems seem to have no author at all..." The "Library Journal" stated that her style is "unapologetically solipsistic," one that is "almost quaintly Miltonic." And the august Richard Eder in the august New York Times said hers was a "remarkable voice." He compared her to Rilke, and said "Even as the brain struggles, the neck hairs lift." Now I have to admit that when I read stuff like this, and then leaf through her poems, my neck hairs don't do much of anything, but the rest of me gets a little weird. I feel like I've just landed on earth from the planet Ixneabar, discovering a world filled with conspiracies of nonsense. Furthermore, there are words and phrases that some of us innocents can't make head nor tail of: "the swag of clay," "nerves wearing only moonlight/whelm sprawl," "The furrow of the hard now."

51. Jorie Graham --- Obtuse And Irresponsible Reviewing
To Whom it May Concern I am writing to respond, albeit belatedly, to LolitaLark's contemptuous review of jorie graham's latest book, Swarm.
http://www.ralphmag.org/AQ/letters.html
Obtuse
and
Irresponsible
Reviewing
To Whom it May Concern: I am writing to respond, albeit belatedly, to Lolita Lark's contemptuous review of Jorie Graham's latest book, Swarm. After reading Lark's puerile, off-the-cuff responses to other (better?) reviewers' opinions of the book (which she calls, unaccountably, a "booklet") it became clear to me that the reviewer was far more interested in her own cleverness and ability to dash off a few zingers than in forming a thoughtful, careful, and mature opinion of the poetry. If she had taken the time to do this - and to consider the book on its own terms, rather than those of Graham's previous reviewers - I suspect she may have found that this book was worth her consideration, and then some. As it is, Lark engages in the worst form of literary sycophancy: paying more attention to what's said about a work than to what the work itself says. Jorie Graham is one of the most interesting - and innovative - poets writing today, and while those who are unprepared to find value beyond the familiar and canonical might encounter her with the same fear and loathing that Lark does, those of us who are truly invested in the growth and vitality of poetry encounter her with gratitude and respect. And finally, I recommend acquiring the good sense not to judge a writer's - or anyone's - pedagogical skill while still possessed of an abysmal lack of information about it. Graham is an even better professor of poetry than she is a poet. But perhaps I'm one of those new American writers for whom Lark has, quite unnecessarily, invoked divine aid.

52. Enculturation: Meaghan Roberts
Ideology Been There, Done That Utopia Call for a NowHere Other The Poethic andjorie graham Closure Appendix. Works Cited Easthope, Antony. graham, jorie.
http://enculturation.gmu.edu/1_2/roberts/
Poetic Subjectivity, Its Imagination and Others: Toward an Ethical Postmodern Imagination
Meaghan Roberts
About the Author

Table of Contents

The point of critique is not justification but a different way of feeling, another sensibility.
Gilles Deluze
You be me for a while, and I'll be you
The Replacements
poethic we need to learn, as Carole Maso urges in Ava , to "Listen hard," to our others. Ideology and Utopia In his Lectures on Ideology and Utopia , Paul Ricoeur finds in Althusser's concept of ideology is "a system," as in a problematic, also a "system of representation," which has "historical existence . . . [that] is a part of the process of overdetermination," that as he quotes Althusser, "'ideology is a matter of the lived relation between men and their world'" and "all of these concepts overlap" (135). Connected in these concepts is everything about human being, including our sign systems, our psychoanalytic theories, our poetics, our notions of gender and otherness, as well as our ethical and political systems of relation and powerthe relation between men and their world.

53. Jorie Graham, A Poetry Reading Review
What if poetry readings were treated like indie rock concerts? Find out here, in Paula Sands' review Category Arts Literature Authors G graham, jorie...... Nextin-Thread Next Message jorie graham, A Poetry Reading Review. Add Message to jorie graham, A Poetry Reading Review .
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Jorie Graham, A Poetry Reading Review
Forum: Post Reviews Here
Date: 2000, Mar 16
From: Paula Sands insanityhelps@yahoo.com
Jorie Graham, an American born and raised in Italy, has received several honors and serves in several literary capacities, which include being at the head of the Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa and being a Boyleston Professor at Harvard. She was elected Chancelor of the Academy of American Poets, and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1996 for her book, "The Dream of the Unified Field: Selected Poems 1974-1994". She has not mastered the art of coming to class prepared.
Ms. Graham arrived at 4:15 for her 4:00 reading at Langley Hall at the California Institute of the Arts on March 1st. She appeared to have come directly from the airport, without having had time to refresh her appearance or to rest. She gratefully accepted a glass of water, from which she drank thirstily as a representative from Cal Arts' Critical Studies Department gave a 10-minute introduction.
When Ms. Graham stood up to the microphone in her black blazer/jacket, black tight pants and black knit shirt I wondered whether her poetry would be of the beat variety. I was to be reassured. (Oddly enough, there was a higher number of people wearing black clothing at the front of the room than at the back.) She certainly did not show all of her 49 years, even in her obvious weariness, but her quiet voice was breathless and hard to hear as she acknowledged her introduction and acquainted herself with her audience. Her fatigue became even more evident as she spoke with interest of the similarities between the old-style method of editing film and her writing, putting in the right scenes and taking out the wrong ones. At one point she referred to two lines of poetry as "two rows", and at another she referred to diagonal lines, while drawing them in the air, as "up and down and sideways horizontal lines".

54. Jorie Graham, A Poetry Reading Review
Nextin-Thread Next Message jorie graham, A Poetry Reading Review. Selectthis message jorie graham, A Poetry Reading Review Message Administration.
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55. APR Mar/Apr 2002 Vol. 31/No. 2 | Jorie Graham
The American Poetry Review jorie graham In/Silence. I try to hold my liein mind. My thinking one thing while feeling another. My being forced.
http://www.aprweb.org/issues/mar02/graham.html
Jorie Graham In/Silence I try to hold my lie in mind. My thinking one thing while feeling another. My being forced. Because the truth is a thing one is not permitted to say. That it is reserved for silence, a buttress in silence's flyings, its motions always away from source; that it is re- served for going eye, that seeks the sleek minimum of the meaningless made. Here in the morning light. In matter's massive/muscular/venerable holding-in of all this flow. Next door the roses flow. Blood in the hand that reaches for them flows.
Jorie Graham is the author of eight collections of poetry, including The Dream of the Unified Field (Selected Poems 1974-1994) which won the Pulitzer Prize. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and teaches at Harvard University.
contents
previous

56. Penn Special Collections-APR-Jorie Graham
Photographs from the American Poetry Review Records, 19711998 Ms.Coll. 349. jorie graham,
http://www.library.upenn.edu/collections/rbm/photos/APR/graham.html
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Jorie Graham Index Index to Volume 152 Last update: Friday, 31-Jan-2003 20:25:14 EST
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57. List Of Books
The Dream of the Unified Field Selected Poems, 19741994 by jorie graham EccoPress , paper , 199 pages. by jorie graham Ecco Press , paper , 112 pages.
http://www.semcoop.com/author/1027
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58. Never -- Poems -- Jorie Graham
by jorie graham. Harper Collins Publishers. Due/Published June 2002,128 pages, cloth. ISBN 0060084715. Seminary Coop 5757 S. University
http://www.semcoop.com/detail/0060084715
Search for Author/Title Keyword Title Author Publisher ISBN Featured Books in All Scholarly Subjects African American Studies African Studies American Studies Anthologies Anthropology Architecture Asian Studies Books on Books Chicago Cinema studies Media Studies Classical studies Critical Theory/Marxism Cultural Studies Geography Performance Studies Science studies Drama Economics Education Environmental studies Feminist theory/Women's study Fiction Folktales French Stuff General Interest Highlights History African African American American East Asia Eastern European European Latin American Medieval Middle East Russian South asian Southeast Asian Historiography Misc. History Humor International relations Journals Just for Fun Latin American/Caribbean St. Law Linguistics Literary Studies Literary Criticism Referenc Literary MOSTLY Theory Literary NOT Theory Mathematics Medicine/Health/AIDS Native American Studies Philosophy Photography Poetry Political Science/Sociology (Post)colonial studies Psychology Reference Foreign language reference General Reference Religious studies Black Theology Buddhist studies Islamic studies Biblical studies - New Test Biblical studies Old Test.

59. Jorie Graham- Take Her, Please!
TOP12DES11 This Old Poem 12 jorie graham’s Of The Ever-ChangingAgitation In The Air Copyright © by Dan Schneider, 7/29/02.
http://www.cosmoetica.com/TOP12-DES11.htm
This Old Poem #12:
Jorie Graham’s Of The Ever-Changing Agitation In The Air
1 would be hard-pressed to find a more stereotypical example of current PC Elitist Academia than poetessaster (poet-disaster?) Jorie Graham. She’s white, she’s female, she’s middle-aged, she has no real writing talent, yet her poetry is the sine qua non of the workshop poem- it does not offend nor inspire, it just sort of lays there. Her poems generally deal with little things- she’ll take on personae, flutter about in wind. Is she a terrible poet? No. Is she a good poet? Not even remotely. She is a total lightweight. A feather that cannot land on any –ism’s earth. Yet the New Yorker magazine- a few years back- called her ‘ the closest thing American poetry has to a rock star .’ Why? No one really knows. Does she get the usual sizable crowds that a published poet gets? Yes. But nowhere near the response a Maya Angelou gets, or an Allen Ginsberg got. Neither her poetry nor personality lend themselves to something bordering on the electric
A few years back a book of her poems came out- it was called The Errancy . Naturally, the cover had a painting on it, 1 by Rene Magritte-

60. 'Swarm' By Jorie Graham
Swarm' by jorie graham. Poetry Roundup ‘Swarm’. jorie graham’s ‘Swarm’.There are people who love jorie graham’s poems and those who detest them.
http://www.post-gazette.com/books/reviews/20000820review559.asp
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'Swarm' by Jorie Graham Poetry Roundup: ‘Swarm’ Sunday, August 20, 2000 By Grace Rishell, Post-Gazette Staff Writer Swarm By Jorie Graham Ecco Press
Jorie Graham’s ‘Swarm’ There are people who love Jorie Graham’s poems and those who detest them. Her new volume will do nothing to bring those two groups together, nor, necessarily, should it. The poet has always the choice of subject matter and style. It’s the reader’s choice whether to purchase the book or give it any attention. That Graham, who won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1996 for “The Dream of the Unified Field: Selected Poems 1974-1994,” is a cultivated writer seems beyond dispute. “Swarm” is dotted with classical, religious and historical references. Much of the criticism surrounding the author has come from readers who say she writes in nonsequiturs, which are confusing and make meaning elusive. They will find much to dislike with this latest effort, while Graham’s fans will likely say her disjointed style is a perfect vehicle to represent the dislocation of the world.

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