Magisterarbeit, 2009
15 Seiten, Note: High Distinction 85%
This essay examines the work of Martin Harrison, a postmodern poet, and explores how his poetry reflects the anxieties and dilemmas of living in the postmodern era. The essay focuses on Harrison's use of imagery, juxtaposition, and experimentation to convey a sense of disorientation, fragmentation, and the search for meaning in a world dominated by technology and consumerism.
The essay begins by introducing the idea that postmodern poets are forced to write about the time in which they live, highlighting Harrison's use of imagery and juxtaposition to encapsulate the anxieties and dilemmas of this epoch. The essay then delves into the concept of Harrison's poetic cosmovision, which focuses on infinitesimal moments and their ripple-like effect, highlighting the influence of time and its ramifications on the individual and the poetic artist. The essay proceeds to examine Harrison's Neo-Formalist approach, emphasizing his focus on describing "made spaces" rather than seeking resolutions, and how this approach reflects the changing cultural paradigms of the postmodern era. The essay then explores Harrison's poem "Summer," analyzing its themes of the lonely tourist's existence, the metonymic disposition of the swimming pool, and the transformation of the universal symbol of the ocean into the omnipresence of the "image."
The essay continues by exploring the concept of Baudrillard's "Simulacra and Simulation" and how it relates to Harrison's portrayal of the contemporary world as a distorted reality dominated by images and cinematics. The essay then examines the poem "Flowers: 1. Landscape" and its themes of the loss of authenticity, the natural world becoming obsolete, and the dominance of the "TV screen" in our perceptions. The essay concludes by analyzing Harrison's poem "Letter from America - to Lewis Ruark" and its themes of the influence of technology, the yearning for stability, and the search for meaning in a fragmented and rapidly changing world. The essay then explores Harrison's concept of "things" as malevolent commodities and his use of poetic language to interrupt the seamless relationship between managerialism and technology. The essay finishes by examining the poem "Double Movement" and its themes of the interaction, or lack thereof, between nature and human nature in the postmodern era, highlighting Harrison's use of poetry to explore and understand the human condition.
This essay focuses on the key themes of postmodernity, technology, consumerism, identity, meaning, and the role of poetry in understanding the contemporary human condition. The essay explores these themes through the work of Martin Harrison, highlighting his use of imagery, juxtaposition, and experimentation as key stylistic elements in his poetry. Important concepts related to this work include the influence of time, the postmodern cosmovision, the Neo-Formalist approach, the image, and the impact of technology on human experience.
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