Thematic Index to Michael Benedikt's THE BODY & SKY
Subject-Index to topics of poems in Michael Benedikt's first two books of Poetry:
THE BODY (Wesleyan U. Press, l968) & SKY (Wesleyan U. Press, l970).
Last Modified 10/12/00--with new Notes & Graphics throughout
Intended partly as a teacher & also student resource, this page indexes by topic all poems in both books
Benedikt in l969
Book Jackets
The Body Sky
[Illustration by Anonymous] [Painting by Tom Wesselmann]
General Note
1. Thematic Index in Brief: List
of Topics in THE BODY/SKY
Click for Main
Themes in THE BODY & SKY by Category
2. Thematic
Index: List of Topics, with Titles of Poems Related to each Topic
(includes Notes & Commentary on some of the thematic
categories--more commenary to come)
Click for Main Themes in THE BODY and
SKY with Poem-Titles & Commentary
3. Orig. 'Acknowledgment Pages'
for THE BODY and SKY as printed by Wesleyan
Click for Acknowledgment Pages
& Literary Magazines in which poems first
appeared
4. Brief Benedikt
Biography/Bibliography
Click for Brief
Bio.
5. Links to Other Pages of This
Website
Click for Other Pages of This
Website
6. Selected External Benedikt
Links
Click for sites re other Benedikt
books
Main Themes in THE BODY and SKY by Category
Thematic Categories, starred [*] are
followed by Notes & Commentary
Notes provide info on Benedikt's philosophical
concerns & multi-media interests
during the period in the 1960's when THE BODY & SKY were being
written
Notes appear at the bottom of categories
discussed, & begin with comments on the Philosophical
poems
The Four Elements, Childhood and Youth and Growing Up, Gardens and Their Symbolic Meanings,
Time, Space, Spirituality,
Philosophy [*], Love and Eroticism, 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 Unusual/Multiple Dictional Shifts[*]
Above: a mid-1960's Happening. Second
from right is Benedikt--in jacket & wearing tie, no
less.
Event is Meat Joy, a "Kinetic Theatre"
piece by Carolee Schneemann. Schneemann, stressed-out, upper left.
Date & Location of Event: l966, Judson Church,
NYC.
Click back up to Page Contents
Click for start of Notes & Commentary
Thematic
Index:
Main Topics in THE BODY
& SKY
& Titles of Poems Related to Those Topics
(includes Notes & Commentary on some Topics)
Info & Compilations by The Benedikt Team
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
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(*) Notes/Commentary begin below titles of poems in categories discussed
Advancing
Millwheel
After A Reading of (Marshall) 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
Let Me Out
Site
Liquid Links (not a compendium of URLs, but actually a poem title;
Cf also "Site," above)
(*) In two of three extant interviews, Benedikt comments on his readings in the philosophy of Greek philosopher Plato, during the later l960's and while writing SKY especially. (Theme of SKY is announced in its title poem, "The Sky," which--expressing yearning for some kind of more flexible & fluid Reality than then existed or was technologically conceivable--begins: "Everything must become lighter/All phenomena of flora & fauna." Plato's classic philosophical ideas seem infused with Benedikt's thinking in his poetry of the period. Plato's idea that there's an ideal, timeless world of some kind, which passing things & existing phenomena merely approximate and generally fall short of, are in harmony with the acerbic critiques of reality and the related yearnings for a far better reality expressed in THE BODY & (especially) SKY--and in fact throughout all 5 of Benedikt 's published poetry books. (Benedikt's acerbic, piquant critiques are sometimes funny, sometimes cuttingly ironical; & sometimes both; but critiques of, for example, heavy-handed, conventional, pre-Web non-virtual "Reality" are implicitly present in all his poetry books). Sidelight: Interviews with Benedikt have appeared in the critical festschrift, BENEDIKT: A PROFILE (Grilled Flowers Press, l978, interview by Naomi Shihab Nye); and in The Falcon (a literary magazine, with interview by Joe Bellamy, l976--reprinted with revisions in Poesis , l987); and in The Poetry Society of America Newsletter (interview by Dennis Stone, l985). Available online, with answers to some interview questions expanded & updated in 1998, is The PSA Interview. (A link to PSA interview, which focusses particularly on prose poetry, is given at end-site under "External Links: Brief Prose Poems/Interview" ). (Tip: Don't go there yet; you might lose your place). Perspectives re THE BODY & SKY are given in the course of all 3 interviews.
Love poems (Poems about Love & Eroticism)--THE BODY(*)
Divine Love
Some Litanies
Hiding Place
Pink Buds
Tulips
In Love With You
The Grand Guignols of Love
The Great Divan
Developments
Fraudulent Days
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
Procession
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
(*) Commentary on the above "Love Poems" BODY-SKY category
forthcoming in later 2000 or 2001. Forthcoming before that: a new BODY-SKY
webpage called Dark Love Poems.
URL for when it's posted:
https://members.tripod.com/~MichaelBenedikt/darklove.html
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)
(*) 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). A translation by Benedikt of Godard's scenario for his film "A Woman Is A Woman" appeared in France circa l966 in Cahiers du Cinema, the unofficial organ of French "New Wave" Film Directors. It, too, was reprinted in Dutton's Godard anthology. Benedikt's BODY & SKY poems, with their quick "cross-cutting" from image to image, their proliferations of metaphor, and their playful leaps into the funny & the fantastic replete with visions of other- worldly, playfully child-like bliss--as well as worldly, sensuous & sometimes erotic bliss--suggest great sympathy with the rapidity & formally-liberated technique, mood & tone of most 60's "New Wave" film-making. It's a technique which, itself, owes much to the image-juxtaposing techniques of The Collage, as practiced by many leading 20th-century painters & other painters, too.
Benedikt's interest in Happenings, suggested in "Mirror"--a poem dedicated to Director Julian Beck of The Living Theatre--is fully reflected in his anthology THEATER EXPERIMENT (Doubleday, l967). THEATER EXPERIMENT includes, in addition to a general Introduction to the Happening genre, scripts by leading 1960's "happener" Allan Kaprow, with Charles Frazier (Gas); Carolee Schneemann (Meat Joy); and Robert Whitman. (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. The article is reprinted in THEATER EXPERIMENT). T.E. also includes brief Intros to scripted Events.
Above: Alternate Book-Jacket Design for SKY by Sculptor Charles Frazier
The formal explorativeness of the l960's Happening
is suggested by many poems in THE BODY & SKY--despite the fact that the
poems make readily recognizable sense, are generally easy to follow despite
the sense of mystery pervading many, and proceed according to highly logical
(or else humorously & obviously deliberately illogical)
thought-patterns. The esthetic riskinesness--and to some extent the interest
in interactivity with audiences to be found in many Happenings (in the case
of poet Benedikt, interactivity with poetry audiences and readers)-- appears
to have been very much on the poet's mind when he wrote THE BODY and (perhaps
especially) SKY. In sum: influences on Benedikt's early
poetry were not primarily literary. Nor were they limited to influences
from painting, as was the case with the handful of other poet-art critics
writing in New York City at the time.
Two other Benedikt 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.
Above: Tears, a pocket-sized Event
(Happening) by Benedikt circa l969. Benedikt (at right, in "Sergeant Pepper"-type
jacket) & Assistant (at left, with tray) are seen attaching tears with
(water-soluble) glue to Carolee Schneemann, whose full-length Happening Meat
Joy was one of the leading Events of the '60's period. During gradual,
tear-by-tear tear-attachment, a tape was played of Benedikt reading
a short poem from THE BODY called 'Tears.' The poem, which resembles
falling raindrops on the printed page & which consists mainly of
repetitions of the word "tears"--was repeated a few times in the
background via tape-loop. Effect: Hypnotic--the opposite of the
effect realized in Schneemann's Meat Joy, which was (in Schneemann's
own words), intended to be "Kinetic."
Poem 'Tears" is forthcoming at the 2nd page of
this 5-page Website.
(Location of Event: Max's Kansas City
Bar & Grill in Manhattan--a large, elegant establishment especially
hospitable to art & artists which flourished in NYC in the later
60's).
Other Later 1960's Events by Benedikt (all of which were performed after publication of THE BODY in l968 & during the composition of SKY, published in l970): Performed in NYC at the Manhattan studio loft of major 1960's painter Robert Rauschenberg (who was himself a practicing "happener"), were two events--one based on Benedikt's much-anthologized BODY poem "The European Shoe." "Shoe," too, was presented accompanied by a reading of poetry utilizing tape-loop. Both events were part of a group of events presented simultaneously in a single evening at Rauschenberg's studio loft. Another Benedikt event was performed at The Bandshell in NYC's Central Park, as part of an evening of performances by writer, happener (& lingeree designer) Hannah Weiner, poet art-critic John Perreault, multi-media entrepreneur John Giorno and poet Vito Acconci, who in the '80's & '90's went on to help create & shape "Performance Art"--a form with roots firmly planted in the Happening. Yet another Benedikt event was presented in & (via images projected from 8mm films) around writer Weiner's NYC apartment & design studio. Photographs documenting some of these events are forthcoming at this website. In addition to the photo from Tears at this Webpage, online at the URL given just below this paragraph, is the cover of the Playbill related to "Three Poetry Events" performed at NYC's 92nd St "Y" Poetry Center. Benedikt organized that occasion & served as Master of Ceremonies for it. The "Y" events included Benedikt's poetry-&-dance event "Box." "Box" was conceived by Benedikt. It was based on his circa l969, as-yet-uncollected poem entitled "Box." Event was realized with assistance of Charles Frazier, who sculpted props for it (3 very large, floppy foam-rubber letters spelling out the word "Box") & dancer Linda Tolbert Tarnay, who choreographed the event and created dances suitable for all 3 letters. Others who presented events on that occasion--the only occasion on which Happenings were ever represented at a major NYC Poetry venue--were John Perreault and painter Marjorie Strider. Graphic of cover of Playbill for "Three Poetry Events"--based on a well-known '60's 'Pop' painting by Jim Dine--appears at Benedikt's Theatre, Film & TV Poems Website at URL:
http://members.aol.com/benedit2/index.html
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 (poet-songwriter Bob Dylan; passing
reference)
The Statue Speaks (dedicated to Bob Dylan)
Time Makes Monuments Out Of Events (dedicated to "Minimalist" sculptor Robert
Morris)
The High (N.Y. Philharmonic cellist & "Happener" Charlotte Moorman;
high-fashion designer
Rudi Gernreich; passing references)
Site (yes, title is Site--rock group "Bill Haley & The
Comets," key reference)
Naming The Baby (Mick Jagger of "The Rolling Stones" & 60's singer-songwriter
Donovan;
passing references)
(*) Directly or indirectly, 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 from l963-l972 as one of several Editorial Associates for the magazine Art News, and also authoring feature articles on such artists as the early 20th century French "Intimist" painter Pierre Bonnard, and contemporary US painters Fairfield Porter, Jack Youngerman, and Sherman Drexler. As one of only three 'New York Correspondents' responsible for covering major art exhibits in the entire N.Y.City metropolitan area, in l965 & '66 & '67 Benedikt also reviewed art exhibitions for Art International. The Art International reviews are more extended than the Art News reviews. Examples of a few of the A. I. reviews were collected under the title "Sculpture as Architecture: New York Letter for Art International 1966-67," and appear in the anthology Minimalist Art, ed. Gregory Battcock (E.P. Dutton, l968). An extensive article entitled "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 B. Hess (Collier Books, 1971). Note once again the multi-media, inter-disciplinary nature of Benedikt's activities in the '60's. (Websites of course, are also interdisciplinary--involving several esthetic disciplines simultaneously. Benedikt has had a hand in the creation of several. Selected URLs--those directly related to other Benedikt book publications--are cited at end-page).
Sidelight: "Yoko Ono Notes," a feature article
about a Museum Exhibition in Buffalo, NY by the Asian-American conceptual
artist--at which former Beatle John Lennon acted as co-spokesperson during
press conferences/one-on-one conferences with art critics such as Benedikt
--appeared in the British magazine Art & Artists in 1972. The
piece is illustrated by photographs taken by Benedikt, as are the two London
Magazine articles on film & theater referred to earlier.
Above: Benedikt taking photo of an
environmental sculpture at an art gallery in London,
l968.
(Sculpture is 'mirror-room' type. Photog. is
leaning through circular opening in wall of sculpture to take
picture)
Although the visual arts were by far Benedikt' primary "extra-literary" area of interest, during the later l960's Benedikt also wrote lyrics for songs . A couple were used in a couple of Hollywood feature films. His biography in Marquis' standard Library Reference Work Who's Who in Entertainment, for example, mentions them. His formal affliation as a songwriter with BMI (Broadcast Music, Inc., which licenses rights for re-broadcast of recorded music of all kinds on radio, TV, etc.) began circa l966-7. More about that additional 60's multi-media involvement in a future edition of this webpage (later 2000 or 2001).
(Poems that go to Classifiable
Extremes:)
Poems in Unusual Forms --THE BODY(*)
The European Shoe (a "List-Poem"; also a poem with lines extending into
biblical-type
strophes & verging on prose poem,
but with modern concerns
The Eye ( " )
Some Litanies (poem-playlets)
Tears (poem incorporating "Concrete Poem," i.e., "Visual Poem"
ingredient)
A Visual Face (poem incorporating "Concrete Poem" ingredient)
An Enormous Dangling Sack-Like Net (pure Prose Poem--the only one in THE
BODY (l968)
or SKY (1970). Starting in 1971, Benedikt
turned from verse--& wrote prose poems
almost exclusively for nearly a decade)
Poems in Unusual Forms--SKY(*)
Four Psalms (poem with lines extending into 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 used for
the "Happening"). Under Directorship of
Beck, his troupe The Living Theater, created
several of epic proportions in USA &
abroad, including "Paradise Now" &
"Dionysius in '69." "Mirror" considers
its own progress, as if it were, itself,
an "Event"; and is one of many BODY/SKY
poems in which Benedikt offers "asides"
taking the reader into his confidence
with regard to The Poetic Process).
Sidelight: Beck' s Happenings reached epic
proportions by being interactive to an
extreme degree--& by attempting to involve
audiences on an intimate & (in the
case of Beck's works certainly) even quasi-sexual level
On The Lawn (free-verse poem which changes dramatically from seemingly
improvised
form to "List Poem")
Vertical Considerations ( " )
Site (begins as free-form poem; concludes by abruptly 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
being "Concrete" in the extreme--
i.e., by referring back to itself &
by actually taking into account the size of the page
on which it's printed, which poem ends
by expressing fears about falling off of).
(*) Besides being in "free" verse, many poems in THE BODY & (especially) SKY possess structures which seem 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 many critics have noted, is a risk-taker, even as modern/contemporary poets go). Listed above are examples of poems in which the feeling for Organic Form in both THE BODY & SKY, produces poems in genres either (1) rare in poetry or (2) new for Benedikt, or even (3) brand-new to poetry. These poems contain the seeds of many other, less obviously esthetically extreme but nontheless counter-to-the-norm BODY/SKY poems. In 2 of his 3 interviews, Benedikt points out that his later-l960's interest in forcing the limits of "Organic Form" eventually led to his nearly total commitment in the l970's to The Prose Poem as a literary genre--as Editor, as well as practicing 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). (Re the latter: Issued as a mass-market paperback--but by now legendarily scarce and currently available only in libraries & in rare bookstores offline & via book search services such as those of amazon.com & b&n.com (Barnes & Noble) online--to this day a durable, hardcover edition of THE PROSE POEM has yet to be printed. Over the years, many have lamented this. For example, most recently (as of the date of our later 2000 modifications of this Website), the editor of a literary magazine called The Prose Poem: A International Journal--which was named after Benedikt's prose poem anthology--wrote in his Preface to Issue #10 re Benedikt's "groundbreaking anthology": "when will some visionary publisher reprint this wondrous collection?" Issue #10 of PPAIJ, on topic of "The Best of The Prose Poem," also includes an example of a relatively recent, later Benedikt prose poem.
In Benedikt's P.S.A. interview, also referred to earlier, he refers to the influence of ideas re "Organic Form" in encouraging him to extend the long lines of some of his verse poems into strophes, paragraphs, and finally--in MOLE NOTES and NIGHT CRIES (two books of prose poems published in the l970's) into prose poems written in single paragraphs. (In some of his prose poems Benedikt breaks up his paragraphs into numbered sections like stanzas--which is unusual as prose poems go, & may even be unique ). THE BADMINTON AT GREAT BARRINGTON, in l980, signaled Benedikt's return to writing verse. (He continues to write both verse poetry & prose poetry). Sidelight: Another online source for Benedikt's Out-Of-Print books is powells.com. Bibliography at this page cites books actually by this Michael Benedikt. Others are by others. (In other areas than poetry--writing about architecture and virtual reality, to be precise--they do good, unusually far-seeing, forward-looking work, too).
Highly Surrealistic Poems--THE BODY(*)
Motions: after Man Ray, Surrealist photographer (poem is an extension
of an idea to be
found in Man's Ray's photo 'The Mystery
of Isadore Ducasse', a.k.a. French poet
Lautreamont)
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
(*) 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 l974. However, it's useful 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 of the poems in which Surrealism definitely predominates.
Forthcoming in this space in a future edition of this website: Notes on French Surrealism and the New York City Abstract-Expressionist "Action Painters" of the l950's who were influenced by it; and who in turn influenced the "kinetic" aspect of most Happenings. Also, notes on some other poet-art critics active in NYC in the l960's. With info also on Benedikt's brief association with the first generation of the poets of the so-called "New York School" who were among the American poets his senior whom Benedikt admired & the influence of whose work helped to shape his early 1960's poetry-- reflected first in l962 in a tiny small-press chapbook of short poems called Changes. (Among Benedikt's admirations in l962, it would appear, were Kenneth Koch, Frank O'Hara & John Ashbery). Sidelight: The BODY/SKY 'Dark Love Poems' Webpage-in-progress will include a poem called "Divine Love" which is dedicated to Robert Bly. Another 'Dark Love Poem,' "The Grand Guignols of Love," has a dedication thanking Louis Simpson for his advice.
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; or Barbarella (dedicated
to Jane Fonda)
To Persuade A Lady
(*) Many poems in both THE BODY and SKY reflect the influence of the ideas of the 19th century English Romantic/pre-Symbolist poets--their Platonistic ideas generally; but specifically those of Wordsworth about (1) "natural" form--which came to be known in the 20th cent. as Organic Form; and (2) using natural diction and speech-patterns in poetry. Benedikt forces these ideas (perhaps to their limits) also--often switching rapidly back and forth in his early poetry between different types of natural speech and diction used in "everyday life"; and those used in more formal speech. (Audiotapes of Benedikt's poetry readings are sometimes startling in this respect. The tape library of The Academy of American Poes, In NYC, contains one). This diction-switching occurs both 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). Cited above are a few of the poems in which radical dictional shifts may easily be found.
An article by Benedikt called "Poetry & Videotape: A Suggestion," published in 1978 in New Artists Video, ed. Gregory Battcock (E.P. Dutton), explores the connections between natural, spontaneous speech in modern poetry and its extraordinary capacity to reflect the reality in which humans live; and the feeling of heightened "Realism" sought by later l970's filmmakers using the first types of non-cumbersome, light, flexible, & portable video cameras ever to reach the market. It's a quality which has dominated in contemporary films ever since the Directors of French "New Wave" Cinema led the way to getting a feeling of heightened naturalness into films by using hand-held cameras--as opposed to cameras mounted on tripods, booms, cranes or 'catbird seats'--back in the multi-disciplinarily highly significant breakthrough years of the l960's.
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(Transcribed below are the original Acknowledgment Pages for THE BODY and SKY, including names of literary magazines in which poems were first published)
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, World, etc.)
Note: Selections from Benedikt's other poetry books now appear
at various
websites
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 theater critic George E. 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 (l964-72) and Art International (l965-67). 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 Review, Lips, Michigan Quarterly Review, The New Republic, The Paris Review, Partisan Review; and most recently once again in the The Paris Review (#151), which includes a long poem in praise of genius of Albert Einstein. Benedikt's work appears in numerous anthologies of US modern/contemporary 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 in English & Creative Writing Depts. at Bennington (1968-69), Sarah Lawrence (1969-73), Hampshire College (l973-75, and Vassar (l976-77); and at Boston University (1977-79/80). He lives in New York City. E-Mail at benedit1@aol.com.
Above: Benedikt, in painting by Walter K. Gutman. In this rather funny rendering, the person in circus-tutu & boots at whom the poet is pointing a somewhat exaggerated nose is a circus-performer friend of painter. Besides being a painter & also an underground filmmaker, Gutman was a stock broker & Wall St. financial expert, who wrote weekly stock-market letters issued by Shields & Co. Painting appears in THE GUTMAN LETTER (Something Else Press, 1969), a selection of multi-talented Gutman's strangely poetic, & even somewhat lyrical stock-market letters edited by Benedikt between the publication of THE BODY (l968) and that of SKY (l970). (THE GUTMAN LETTER includes reproductions of a few of Gutman's paintings & also film-stills. With Jack Dreyfus of the famed Dreyfus Fund, Gutman was co-backer of the first US underground film, Pull My Daisy, which featured narration by Jack Kerouac & which starred among others, Allen Ginsberg). In sum: The later l960s' were busy, almost frenetically active & productive years for Benedikt. Besides BODY and SKY, his bios reference his Theatre Anthology-editing & his Professorial activities at two Colleges in the later 60's.
OTHER PAGES OF THIS WEBSITE
Home Page: Michael Benedikt: Early Books of Poetry--THE BODY and SKY
Especially Eerie Poems from THE BODY and SKY for Halloween
EXTERNAL LINKS TO WEBSITES RE OTHER BENEDIKT
BOOKS
Prose Poems
by Michael Benedikt, with Y2K updates of selections from Benedikt's fourth
book
of poetry, Night Cries; & a review of his mid-1970's prose
poetry from London Times Literary Supplement.
Prose Poems
by Michael Benedikt: Brief Prose Poems, with updates of shorter poems
from Night Cries.
Also an interview with Benedikt on prose poetry, etc., first published in
Poetry Society of America Newsletter,
in
an 1998/9 update; & essay, "Future of American Prose
Poetry"
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