Subject Index to Michael Benedikt's THE BODY and SKY

Thematic Index of Poems in Michael Benedikt's first two books of Poetry:

THE BODY (Wesleyan U. Press, l968) & SKY (Wesleyan U. Press, l970)

This site indexes by subject all of the poems in both books.


    [The Body]                                                                                     [ Sky] 

    [Book Jacket: Anon]                 [Book Jacket:  Tom Wesselman]     


General Note:

This is a site-in-progress re two books written in the mid-&-later l960's.
A ground-breaking, watershed period in both America's political history
and in the Arts generally, it was also a highly explorative period in Benedikt's poetry.
THE BODY and SKY initiate the esthetic explorations to be found in Benedikt's later books
as well as other later writings, some of which are represented on The Web.


Contents of This Page:

1. Subject-Index: General List of  Thematic Categories
(Topics in THE BODY and SKY)

Click for Subject-Index Categories

      2. Subject-Index: Thematic Categories & Poems Included in Them
(Poems included in Topical Categories--includes brief commentary re some of the more complex categories)

Click for Subject-Index: Topics in THE BODY and SKY and List of Poems

3. Original 'Acknowledgment Pages' for THE BODY and SKY as printed by book publisher

Click for Acknowledgment Pages

4. Brief Benedikt Biography/Bibliography

Click for Brief Benedikt Biography

5. Some Current Benedikt Links

[Note: Benedikt's 3rd  poetry book is Mole Notes (Wesleyan, l971) . His 4th poetry book is Night Cries (Wesleyan, l976). They are books of prose poetry. External links listed at the end of this page reference Night Cries.]

Click for External Links re Benedikt


Index Categories for THE BODY and SKY:

The Four Elements,  Childhood and Youth and Growing Up,  Gardens and Their Symbolic Meanings,

Love and Eroticism,  Time,  Space,

Spirituality,  Philosophy[*],  Business and Finance,  Social Concerns,

Language and Esthetics,  Film and Theatre[*],  References to l960's Art & Artists & Rock Music[*],

& Poems that go to Classifiable Extremes:

(1) Poems in Unusual Forms[*];  (2) Highly Surrealistic Poems[*]

(3) Poems with Multiple or Radical Dictional Shifts[*]

Note: Indexing of some of the more complex Thematic Categories, starred [*], includes brief commentary


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Subject-Index:

Topics in THE BODY and SKY and List of Poems

The Four Elements--THE BODY

Air
Pyromaniac's Lament in Spring

The Four Elements--SKY

Water
Liquid Links
On Earth
The Sky

Childhood & Youth & Growing Up--THE BODY

Mr. Rainman
The Cities
The Ambitious Lump

Childhood & Youth & Growing Up--SKY

Passing Through Troy/The Student of Wonder
Psalm I

Gardens & their Symbolic Meanings--THE BODY

Time
Pink Buds
Tulips
In Love With You

Gardens & their Symbolic meanings--SKY

Go--And Whisper To Roses
This Morning I Fooled A Butterfly
The Statue Speaks
Tuberoses
Overheard in A Third Avenue Bar
On The Lawn
The Woman In The Tree

Love poems (Poems about Love & Eroticism)--THE BODY

Fraudulent Days
Divine Love
Some Litanies
Hiding Place
Pink Buds
Tulips
In Love With You
The Grand Guignols of Love
The Great Divan
Developments
A Visual Face
Coiffure
A Beloved Head
Joy
For Love or Money: Two Complaints--Part 1
At Night
The Observation-Tower
The Swimmer's Tears
Before Going On
Inside The Mystery
The Bathroom Mirror

Love poems (Poems about Love & Eroticism)--SKY

Advice to One More Novice in New York
Rose
The Bed Beyond The Bed
Waking
Prayers
All Women Are One Woman (for their Liberation & Mine)
For Jane (& Roger) But Certainly Not For Henry; or, Barbarella
Modest Undressings
To Persuade A Lady
After a Poetry Reading by Allan Kaplan
Sunday Morning: Hymn
The Woman In The Tree

Time--THE BODY

Motion
Procession
Time
Tears
Gemini Emblem
After His 31st Birthday Party
The Way Things Settle
The Wings of The Nose
Old School Ties

Time--SKY

The Future
The Seer
The Statue Speaks (for Bob Dylan)
On The Lawn
Events
Environments
Time Makes Monuments Out Of Events (after Robert Morris)
Vertical Considerations
Vertical Virtues
The Bed Beyond The Bed
Fate In Incognito
Four Psalms
Absence Of Me
Naming The Baby
Regrets

Space--THE BODY

Space--SKY

The Seer
The Sky
Site

Spirituality & Belief--THE BODY

The Spirit
Some Feelings
A Strained Credulity
Thoughts
The Saint
The Guardian Angel

Spirituality & Belief--SKY

Country Living
The Statue Speaks (for Bob Dylan)
Go Away
Vertical Considerations
The Bed Beyond The Bed
The High
Four Psalms
Prayers
Sunday Morning: Hymn

Philosophy--THE BODY

Advancing
Millwheel
After A Reading of McLuhan, Whom I Admired

Philosophy--SKY(*)

On The Lawn
Go Away
Events
Throw Away The Rainbow
The High
On Earth
The Sky
Flicker
Four Psalms
Absence Of Me
Site
Liquid Links
Let Me Out

(*) Footnote: In two of three extant interviews, Benedikt comments on his interest in the philosophy of Plato, during the later l960's especially. Sidelight: Interviews with Benedikt have appeared in The Falcon (l976), reprinted with revisions in Poesis, l987; in the critical festschrift, BENEDIKT: A PROFILE (Grilled Flowers Press, l977/78); and in The Poetry Society of America Newsletter (l985)..A link to the latter is given at end-site, under "Selected External Links." Perspectives, philosophical & other, re THE BODY and SKY are given in all three interviews.

Business & Finance--THE BODY

For Love or Money: Two Complaints--Part 2

Business & Finance--SKY

Money

Poems of Social Concern--THE BODY

Pyromaniac's Lament in Spring

Poems of Social Concern--SKY

Clement Attlee
Money
The Artillery Portrait
All Women Are One Woman (for their Liberation & Mine)
Money
Overheard in A Third Avenue Bar
Let Me Out

Language & Esthetics--THE BODY

Events by Moonlight
After A Reading of McLuhan, Whom I Admired

Language & Esthetics--SKY

The Sky
Absence Of Me
Site
The Esthetic Fallacy
Definitive Things
Mirror (poem-event for Julian Beck)
After a Poetry Reading by Allan Kaplan
The Wonders of The Arm

Film & Theatre--THE BODY

Film & Theatre--SKY(*)

The Audience for Eternity
Mirror (Poem-Event for Julian Beck)
For Jane (& Roger) But Certainly Not For Henry; or, Barbarella (for Jane Fonda)
Overheard in A Third Avenue Bar (Jean-Luc Godard; passing reference)
Naming The Baby (Godard; passing reference)

(*) Footnotes: Benedikt's interest in the films of Godard is also reflected in the article "Alphaville And Its Subtext (in Paul Eluard's Poetry)," collected in Jean-Luc Godard, Ed. Toby Mussman (E.P. Dutton, 1968). His translation of the scenario of Godard's "A Woman Is A Woman" first appeared in France in Cahiers du Cinema, circa l966, and was later reprinted in the Dutton Godard  anthology.

    Benedikt's interest in Happenings, reflected in "Mirror"--a poem dedicated to Director Julian Beck of  The Living Theatre--is fully reflected in his anthology Theatre Experiment (Doubleday, l967). Theatre Experiment includes, in addition to an Introduction to the Happening genre, scripts by "happeners" Allan Kaprow, Carolee Schneemann, and Robert Whitman; and Introductions re each of their Events. (It was about Whitman's Happening Flower that Benedikt wrote his first art-related article, which appeared in The Village Voice in l963, when Happenings were still relatively new).

    Two other visual-arts-related articles, "Happenings in 1968" and "The Underground Film Breaks Cover" were published in l968 in The London Magazine. "New at The Seventh Annual Lincoln Center Film Festival" appeared in Andy Warhol's magazine, Inter/View, in 1969.

References to l960's Art, Artists, & Rock Musicians--THE BODY(*)

References to l960's Art, Artists, & Rock Musicians--SKY(*)

Overheard in A Third Avenue Bar (Bob Dylan; passing reference)
The Statue Speaks (dedicated to Bob Dylan)
Time Makes Monuments Out Of Events (dedicated to Robert Morris)
The High (Charlotte Moorman; Rudi Gernreich; passing reference)
Site (Bill Haley & The Comets)
Naming The Baby (Mick Jagger & Donovan; passing references)

(*) Footnotes: Many poems in The Body and Sky (the latter especially) reflect the iconography of visual artists, particularly the "Pop Artists" and "Minimalist Artists" active during the l960's. During the l960's Benedikt worked as an Art Critic, reviewing art exhibitions as one of several Editorial Associates for Art News from l963-l972, and writing articles on such painters as Pierre Bonnard, Fairfield Porter, Jack Youngerman and Sherman Drexler. In l965/66/67 he reviewed art exhibitions for Art International, as one of three 'New York Correspondents' responsible for covering major art exhibitions in the entire New York City area. Examples of Benedikt's art reviews, collected under the title "Sculpture as Architecture: New York Letter for Art International 1966-67," appear in the anthology Minimalist Art, ed. Gregory Battcock (E.P. Dutton, l968). "The Visionary French: l9th Century French Symbolist Poets & Painters," which first appeared in Art News Annual, 1966, was reprinted in The Grand Eccentrics, ed. John Ashbery and Thomas Hess (Collier Books, 1971).
    Sidelight: "Yoko Ono Notes," about a Museum Exhibition by the Asian-American conceptual artist, at which former Beatle John Lennon acted as co-spokesperson during press conferences with art critics and others, appeared in the British magazine Art & Artists in 1972.

(Poems that go to Classifiable Extremes):

Poems in Unusual Forms --THE BODY(*)

The European Shoe (a "List-Poem"; also a poem with biblical-type strophes, but with               modern concerns, & verging on prose poem)
The Eye ( " )
Some Litanies (poem-playlets)
Tears (poem incorporating "Concrete Poem" ("Visual Poem") ingredient)
A Visual Face (poem incorporating "Concrete Poem" ingredient)
A Enormous Dangling Sack-Like Net (Prose Poem)

Poems in Unusual Forms--SKY(*)

Four Psalms (poem with biblical-type strophes, verging on Prose Poem)
Mirror: Poem-Event for Julian Beck (poem which considers the act of writing as an "event"--       event, in the sense of a l960's-style "Happening." During the l960's, "Event" was an            alternative term for "Happening". "Mirror" considers its own progress, as if it were an       "Event"; and is one of many Body/Sky poems in which Benedikt makes "asides" taking       the reader into his confidence with regard to The Poetic Process.).

On The Lawn (free-verse poem which changes from improvised form to "List Poem")
Vertical Considerations ( " )
Site (begins as free-form poem; concludes by referring back to itself)
Naming The Baby (a "List Poem," but with free-form, lyrical beginning & ending)
Definitive Things (poem structured by reference to puns, and approximately similar words,        forcing issues of  "Concrete Poetry" by actually taking into account the size of the page     on which it is printed).

(*) Footnote: Besides being in "free" verse, many, many poems in THE BODY, & (especially) SKY possess structures which are highly improvisational. They force issues of what philosopher-
esthetician Suzanne K. Langer calls "Organic Form" or "Virtual form"--perhaps to the vicinity of their limits. (Benedikt, as some critics have noted, is a poetic risk-taker). Listed above are examples of poems in which the feeling for Organic Form in both THE BODY and SKY, produces poems in genres either (1) new for Benedikt, or (2) rare in poetry, or even (3) then brand-new to poetry. These poems contain the seeds of many other, less obviously esthetically extreme BODY/SKY poems. In one of his interviews, Benedikt points out that his later-l960's interest in forcing the limits of "Organic Form" led to involvement in the l970's with The Prose Poem as a literary genre--as Editor, as well as practising poet. Cf . Benedikt's third poetry book, MOLE NOTES (prose poems, Wesleyan U. Press, l971); and his fourth, NIGHT CRIES (Prose Poems, Wesleyan, l976); and also THE PROSE POEM: AN INTERNATIONAL ANTHOLOGY (Dell/Laurel, l976). (Originally issued as a mass-market paperback, but by now legendarily scarce and currently available only in libraries & some rare bookstores, to this day a hardcover, durable edition of THE PROSE POEM has not been printed).

Highly Surrealistic Poems--THE BODY(*)

Motions: after Man Ray (Surrealist painter & photographer)
Mr. Rainman
The Eye of the Assassin
The European Shoe
The Aider
Some Old Men
A Beloved Head
Events By Moonlight
Dangerous Ways
The Villain
A Room
The Wings of The Nose
The Debris of The Body
The Audience for Eternity
The Guardian Angel

Highly Surrealistic Poems--SKY(*)

Go--& Whisper to Roses
Clement Attlee
The Seer
Tuberoses
The Artillery Portrait
Events
Psalm IV
Site

(*) Footnote: Some critics have considered both THE BODY and SKY "Surrealistic"-- or at least influenced by French Surrealism. Benedikt's anthology, THE POETRY OF SURREALISM, was published by Little, Brown & Co. in l975. However, it is well to remember, that Surrealism itself has roots which spring--like Benedikt's early poetry--from Romantic/pre-Symbolist/& Symbolist poetry. Listed above are a few poems in which Surrealism predominates.

Poems with Multiple or Radical Dictional Shifts--THE BODY(*)

For Love Or Money

Poems with Multiple or Radical Dictional Shifts--SKY(*)

Go--And Whisper To Roses
Coming And Going--Part I (Passing Through Troy)
Environments (poem specifically mentions preference for informal diction)
The High
The Sky
Flicker
Fate In Incognito
Psalm II
Liquid Links
Let Me Out (poem specifically mentions admiration for Wordsworth)
Naming The Baby
Definitive Things
For Jane (& Roger) But Certainly Not for Henry (for Jane Fonda)
To Persuade A Lady

(*) Footnote: Many poems in both THE BODY and SKY reflect the influence of the ideas of the 19th century English Romantic/pre-Symbolist poets--especially Wordsworth's ideas about "natural" form, and using natural diction and speech-patterns in poetry. Benedikt forces these ideas also--often switching rapidly back and forth between different types of natural speech and diction actually used in "everyday life," and more formal speech. This occurs from poem-to-poem, and within individual poems as well (Benedikt is obviously interested in treating his readers to a wide variety of poetic experiences in several esthetic areas). Listed above are a few of the poems in which dictional shifts predominate.

(Following are the original Acknowledgment Pages for THE BODY and SKY)


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Acknowledgment Pages

(Transcribed below are the original Acknowledgment Pages for THE BODY and SKY)


THE BODY (Wesleyan University Press, l968)

Copyright © l962, l964, l965, l966, l967, l968 by Michael Benedikt

Many of these poems have previously appeared elsewhere. For permission to reprint them here, and for the assignments of copyrights, grateful acknowledgment is made to the editors of the following: Angel Hair, Ambit, Art & Literature, Choice, Lugano Review, Minnesota Review, Paris Review, Quarterly Review of Literature, The Sixties, and Translatlantic Review.

"Before Going On," "An Enormous Dangling Sack-Like Net," "The Eye," "Fraudulent Days," "Inside The Mystery," "Motions," "Pink Beds," "Procession," "The Saint," "Some Litanies," "Some Old Men," "A Strained Credulity," "Tears," "Time," "Thoughts," "Tulips," "The Villain," "A Visual Face," and "The Wings of the Nose" were first printed in Poetry.

(Hardbound & Paperback)

Library of Congress Catalog #: 68-27539


SKY (Wesleyan University Press, l970)

Copyright © l967, l968, l969, l970 by Michael Benedikt

Many of these poems have previously appeared in periodicals. For permissions to reprint and for copyright assignments, grateful acknowledgment is made to the editors and publishers of Ambit, Bennington Review, Chelsea, Kayak, Kenyon Review,London Magazine, Modern Poetry Studies, New American Review, Paris Review, The  Seventies, Stand, Sumac and The World.

"Money," "On Earth," "Psalm I," "Psalm II," "Psalm III," "Psalm IV," "The Sky," "The Statue Speaks, " "Water," and "The Wonders of the Arm" first appeared in Poetry.

Hardbound: ISBN: 0-8195-2052-7

Paperback: ISBN: 0-8195-1052-1

Library of Congress Catalog #: 75-120257


Brief Benedikt Biography

(Complete bio. appears in Who's Who in America)

Michael Benedikt has published five collections of poetry: The Badminton at Great Barrington; or, Gustave Mahler & The Chattanooga Choo-Choo (University of Pittsburgh Press, l980); and with Wesleyan Univ. Press, Night Cries (prose poems, l976); Mole Notes (prose poems, l971); Sky (l970); and The Body (l968). Anthologies of poetry under his editorship are The Prose Poem: An International Anthology (Dell/Laurel, l976); and The Poetry of Surrealism (Little Brown, l974). His anthologies of plays include three volumes co-edited with George Wellwarth: Modern French Theatre: The Avant-Garde, Dada, & Surrealism (E.P. Dutton, l964); Post-War German Theatre (Dutton, l967); & Modern Spanish Theatre (Dutton, l969). He is also the editor of Theatre Experiment: American Plays (Doubleday, l967). He is a former Associate Editor of Art News and Art International. A former Poetry Editor of The Paris Review, his editorial selections are represented in The Paris Review Anthology (Norton, l990). His recent, l990's poetry has been published in New York Quarterly, Agni, Iowa Review,  Jerusalem ReviewLips, Michigan Quarterly Review, The New Republic, and Partisan Review; and is forthcoming in The Paris Review. His work appears in numerous anthologies of US/British poetry. His grants and awards include an NEA Fellowship, and a NY State Council On The Arts Grant, and a Guggenheim Grant. He has given many readings from his poetry, early & other, at colleges and bookstores, around the USA; and has taught at Bennington, Sarah Lawrence, Hampshire, and Vassar College/s; and at Boston University.


Click for Selected Poems from THE BODY. l998 versions.

Click back to Home Page for this page, Michael Benedikt: Early Books of Poetry:
THE BODY and SKY
, including Sitemap.


Selected External Links

                   Link to Prose Poems by Michael Benedikt, a site with medium-sized prose poems                    including updates of poems originally published in Benedikt's fourth book of poetry, Night Cries, in l997/8    versions; and a review of  Benedikt's prose poetry from The London Times Literary Supplement  

Link to Prose Poems by Michael Benedikt: Brief Prose Poems, also a site with updates of Night Cries, together with an interview on prose poetry originally published in The Poetry Society of America Newsletter


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