Photo de l'auteur

Ronald Johnson (1) (1935–1998)

Auteur de Radi Os

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Ronald Johnson, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

15+ oeuvres 248 utilisateurs 8 critiques 3 Favoris

Œuvres de Ronald Johnson

Radi Os (1977) 82 exemplaires
Ark (2013) 41 exemplaires
The Book of the Green Man (1967) 35 exemplaires
The Shrubberies (2001) 24 exemplaires
Valley of the many-colored grasses (1969) 16 exemplaires
Eyes & Objects (1971) 14 exemplaires
Ark 50 : spires 34-50 (1984) 12 exemplaires
To Do As Adam Did: Selected Poems (2000) 8 exemplaires
Sports and divertissments (1965) 3 exemplaires
Ronald Johnson: Life and Works (2008) 2 exemplaires
Radi os : OI-OIV 1 exemplaire
from ARK: The Ramparts (1991) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Best American Poetry 2002 (2002) — Contributeur — 182 exemplaires
American Religious Poems: An Anthology (2006) — Contributeur — 162 exemplaires
The Male Muse: A Gay Anthology (1973) — Contributeur — 63 exemplaires
The Ecopoetry Anthology (2013) — Contributeur — 48 exemplaires
Holding your eight hands; an anthology of science fiction verse (1969) — Contributeur — 20 exemplaires
Epitaphs for Lorine — Contributeur — 5 exemplaires
Triquarterly 19 (Fall 1970) For Edward Dahlberg (1970) — Contributeur — 4 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1935-11-25
Date de décès
1998-03-04
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA

Membres

Critiques

This is great, great for, however---it is not by Magic Johnson
 
Signalé
RODNEYP | Nov 8, 2020 |
Ronald Johnson, who died in 1998, is little known outside the circle of assiduous students of avant-garde poetry, and for good reason. A West Coast recluse and peripatetic visionary, Johnson's major accomplishment was the epic poem ARK, most of which was either published in limited small-press runs or is out of print. ARK is thus a kind of holy grail of lost American weirdness; the edition I just finished reading is a softcover release from now-defunct North Point Press, dating from 1981. This intriguing backstory I took as an invitation to enter a poetic world of deep, strange, nearly incomprehensible verse that yet moves on a bizarre inner logic all its own. If you can imagine the Old Testament crossed with abstracts of theoretical physics and then narrated by William Blake at his loopiest, then you're approaching what reading ARK is like. It is probably needless to say that I'm hooked, and have ordered, at exorbitant expense, a used copy of the 1984 Dutton hardcover of the next 16 books (or "beams" in Johnson's quasibiblical nomenclature) of this strange, subterranean odyssey. What this all means, if anything, is anyone's guess.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
MikeLindgren51 | 3 autres critiques | Aug 7, 2018 |
My introduction to Johnson was Ark, which I continue to be awed by. However, The Book of the Green Man is a completely different kind of book. Stunning bucolic imagery put into conversation with major Romantic and Augustan figures. I get little sense of pressure put on the blindspots of Romanticism--and I suppose I don't get the usefulness of that from a 1967 perspective. Charles Olson is an obvious influence over this work, but unlike Johnson here, Olson offers historiographic awareness of nature as an ideological construction, and he refutes Romanticism as much as he condones it. I do like the material texture of the poems--their engagement with sources, and the organization of the book into a sort of daybook of the seasons. It enacts the changes in the world in interesting parallel structures over the course of the year, but again, without much pressure on conventional nature writing with the exception of the field guide discourse that resists glossing over any plants (as would be more typical of some nature writing). Its a good book to read to get a sense of the early formulations of what he would more astoundingly accomplish in The Valley of Many Colored Grasses (1969).… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Richard.Greenfield | 1 autre critique | Jun 26, 2011 |
It's a perfect book, what can I say. It's perfect. There are poems in it but on the whole there are no poems because it is a book before the poems, it's a book before the existence of the poet, it's a book and it's totally normal, no fancy stuff, but on my god wonderful, and it moves is it's this perfect action through time. It's perfect.
 
Signalé
dawnpen | 1 autre critique | Nov 3, 2005 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
15
Aussi par
7
Membres
248
Popularité
#92,014
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
8
ISBN
30
Favoris
3

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