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(2016) The meaning of form in contemporary innovative poetry, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Veronica Forrest-Thomson

poetic artifice and naturalization in theory and practice

Robert Sheppard

pp. 29-46

Forrest-Thomson's Poetic Artifice is explored, both as a theory of poetry, which emphasizes form, artifice, and processes of good and bad naturalization, and as a poetics for her own poetry. While her terms are treated as useful tools in attempting to show how artifice can critique the world, her concepts of the "image-complex" and 'suspended naturalization", and her insistence that artifice is "non-meaningful", are found wanting. The semiotics of Yuri Lotman and the thinking of Charles Bernstein rescue these terms, but not enough to stop Forrest-Thomson's forensic analysis of her own poetry demonstrating the impossibility of fusing theory with poetics, even though she throughout maintains the primacy of artifice.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-34045-6_2

Full citation:

Sheppard, R. (2016). Veronica Forrest-Thomson: poetic artifice and naturalization in theory and practice, in The meaning of form in contemporary innovative poetry, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 29-46.

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