Shop > Anthologies

#16707

After Words: Visual and Experimental Poetry in Little Magazines and Small Presses, 1960-2025

Price
$69.95
Date
2025
Publisher
Granary Books and Inc.
Format
Anthologies
ISBN
9781887123877
Size
22 × 28 cm
Length
232 pp
Genre
Poetry, Text-Based
Description

By the 1960s, visual and experimental poetry was widely acknowledged as the first truly international poetry movement, occurring on several continents. The simultaneous “mimeograph revolution”—an emerging name for the proliferation of small, poet- and artist-operated presses and little magazines that emerged in the postwar era—meant that an extraordinary variety of experimental work appeared in ephemeral outlets, often reflecting an array of geographic influence and communities.
After Words is a thematic journey through the history of these experimental poetics, including cut-up, collage, sound poetry scores, performance scripts, practices of “writing through,” erasure, glyph systems, calligraphy, experimental typography, non-Western alphabets, assemblages and beyond. Most importantly, it presents these works within their original contexts through photographs of page spreads from storied publications and presses.

Contributors include: Mary Beach, Wallace Berman, bill bissett, William S. Burroughs, Henri Chopin, Judith Copithorne, Johanna Drucker, d.a. levy, bpNichol, Seiichi Niikuni, Tom Phillips, Miroljub Todorovic, Cecilia Vicuña, Marian Zazeela.

Little magazines include: A: An Envelope Magazine of Visual Poetry, Alcheringa, Futura, L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E, New Wilderness Letter, Poor.Old.Tired.Horse., Revue OU, Stereo Headphones, The Difficulties, The Improbable, The Insect Trust Gazette, The Marrahwanna Quarterly, WhiteWalls.

Small presses include: Beau Geste Press, blewointmentpress, C Press, Chax Press, Coach House Press, Edition Hansjörg Mayer, Goliard Press, Hawk’s Well Press, Openings Press, Poltroon Press, Siglio Press, Station Hill, Tarasque Press, Tetrad Press, Xexoxial Editions.

  1. 9781887123877
 

Related Items

  1. Jasmine Reimer: Small Obstructions
  2. Piero Heliczer, Benjamin Thorel, and Sophie Vinet: Piero Heliczer
  3. Danielle LaFrance: Friendly + Fire
  4. Daniel F. Bradley, Hart Broudy, and JW Curry: LMNTS
  5. New Poetry Titles for August 2016
  6. David Reinfurt: A New Program for Graphic Design
  7. Nadim Choufi and Yasmine Rifaii: I Will Always Be Looking For You - A Queer Anthology on Arab Art
  8. Marina Roy: Sign after the X
  9. Kevin Spenst: RETRACTABLE
  10. Renat’s Left Hand: Twenty Eight Poems
  11. Giovanna Castillo: The Flipside of the Coffee Mug
  12. The Four Poets: Issue 4
  13. Renat’s Left Hand: Twelve Thousand Six Hundred and Eighty Six
  14. Renat’s Left Hand: Instant Poetry
  15. Rosanna Puyol: A Thing Conducting
  16. The Four Poets, No.2
  17. entalhs…
  18. Laura Broadbent: Interviews
  19. Prathna Lor: 7, 2
  20. Lisa Robertson: Cinema of the Present
  21. Arnaud Gerspacher: The Owls Are Not What They Seem: Artist as Ethologist
  22. Alex Turgeon: 5 Condos
  23. Monitored Properties
  24. Erin Morton: Unsettling Canadian Art History
  25. the rou of alch
  26. Yorgos Lanthimos: i shall sing these songs beautifully
  27. Tila L. Kellman and Michael Snow: Figuring Redemption: Resighting myself in the art of Michael Snow
  28. Kaari Upson: 2000 Words
  29. Aime Iglesias Lukin: This Must Be the Place: An Oral History of Latin American Artists in New York, 1965-1975
  30. Lily Cho, Morris Lum, and Gabrielle Moser: Chinatowns: Tong Yan Gaai
  31. Anahita Jamali Rad: for love and autonomy
  32. The Stars We Do Not See: Australian Indigenous Art
  33. Michael Dumontier and Micah Lexier: Call Ampersand Response
  34. Nicole Cartier Barrera and Nicole Cartier Barrera: A Guide for the Afflicted and Defiant
  35. Stephen Shore: Modern Instances: The Craft of Photography (Expanded Edition)
  36. Movements and Centres
  37. Georges Perec and Mara Cologne Wythe-Hall: Wishes
  38. Paul Chan: 2000 Words
  39. Georgiana Uhlyarik  and Wanda Nanibush: Toronto: Tributes + Tributaries, 1971-1989
  40. Tiziana La Melia: lettuce lettuce please go bad