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From: Parnassus Poetry in ReviewWaldman is a child of the idealistic ‘60's. She is sexy, peaceful, open, funny, pretty fond of herself (and giving lessons in how to do this through good times and ill), and prepared to write about any damn thing in any...Found in Contemporary Literary Criticism
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From: The New York Review of BooksWALDMAN, Anne 1945-Ms Waldman, an American poet, searches for meaning and value in urban settings, looking for "the occasional jewel" which becomes the poem itself. (See also Contemporary Authors, Vols. 37-40.) I don't...Found in Contemporary Literary Criticism
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From: The New York Times Book ReviewWaldman's poems are a kind of high-energy shorthand, elliptical brain-movies of her life and times, and, most recently, as in her outstanding performance piece, "Fast Speaking Woman" (the title poem of [one of her...Found in Contemporary Literary Criticism
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From: MarginsWaldman's Fast Speaking Woman convinces me that a writer of little talent by becoming a celebrity can get work published and sold, and earn a rather large reputation ... I find Waldman's mind predictable, sentimental,...Found in Contemporary Literary Criticism
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From: PoetryIt is time to consider how the work of such oral precursors as Jackson MacLow, Allen Ginsberg, Michael McClure, Gary Snyder, and Robert Bly has been taken up and continued by many of the younger American poets who have,...Found in Contemporary Literary Criticism
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From: Highway 61 Revisited: Bob Dylan's Road from Minnesota to the WorldIn the following essay, Waldman, poet-in-residence on the Rolling Thunder Revue Tour (1975-1976), examines Dylan's debt to the Beat poets, especially Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac. Minneapolis: University of...Found in Contemporary Literary Criticism
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From:Chicago Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAnne Waldman's 'Iovis' is composed of two books with 48 individual poems. These are divided into sections with each section having a third person summary and some related data. Waldman's poetry form is very close to that...Found in Gale Literature Resource Center
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From:Journal of Modern Literature (Vol. 43, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIn the 1960s the "to-do" list poem emerged as a popular genre and compositional method in New York School poetry. Despite its popularity with Ted Berrigan, James Schuyler, and Gary Snyder, and its prominent role in...Found in Gale Literature Resource Center
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From: Contemporary LiteratureIn the following essay, Rifkin discusses Berrigan's efforts at promoting, legitimating, and mythologizing his own poetic career in his writings, with particular attention to The Sonnets and his work as editor of C...Found in Poetry Criticism
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From:Forum for World Literature Studies (Vol. 1, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis is a presentation delivered at the conference by focusing on the "infrastructure poetics" of the Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics, Naropa University. This presentation explores its origin and its connections...Found in Gale Literature Resource Center
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From: Highway 61 Revisited: Bob Dylan's Road from Minnesota to the World[(essay date 2009) In the following essay, Waldman, poet-in-residence on the Rolling Thunder Revue Tour (1975-1976), examines Dylan's debt to the Beat poets, especially Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac.] "he taught me...Found in Gale Literature Resource Center