Sincerely Yours, Wallace Stevens Podcast
1) Reading and Listening to Stevens's Letters: The Delicatest Ear of the Mind
Lisa Goldfarb, professor of philosophy at the Gallatin School at New York University, presents on the importance of reading Wallace Stevens's letters.
2) Sincerely Yours, Wallace Stevens: Opening Remarks with Bart Eeckhout and Lisa Goldfarb
Bart Eeckhout, professor of history at the University of Antwerp, and Lisa Goldfarb, professor of philosophy at New York University, presents opening remarks for the "Sincerely Yours, Wallace Stevens"...Show More
3) Sincerely Yours, Wallace Stevens: Welcome from Steve Hindle
Steve Hindle, W.M. Keck Foundation Director of Research at The Huntington, presents an opening welcome for the "Sincerely Yours, Wallace Stevens" conference.
4) Stevens and the Publishers: What the Huntington Correspondence Reveals
Edward Ragg, independent researcher and editor for "The Wallace Stevens Journal," presents on Wallace Steven's epistolary relationship with publishers and small presses he worked with during his caree...Show More
5) Selling Lemonade to a Crowd of Drunks
Lisa M. Steinman, Kenan Professor of English and Humanities at Reed College, presents on Wallace Steven's attitudes toward commercialism and commodity culture in the arts.
6) Stevens's Correspondence: How the World Found the Poem
George S. Lensing, Mann Family Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, presents on the influence of Wallace Steven's desire for international tr...Show More
7) Somebody Puts a Manifesto Together: The Submerged Adagia
Bart Eeckhout, professor of history at the University of Antwerp, presents on the aphoristic features of Wallace Stevens's poems and letters taken from his fascination with Greek proverbs.
8) Epistolary Stevens: Transitions and Transactions in the Letters
Juliette Utard, associate professor of American literature at the University of Paris-Sorbonne, presents about the literary value of Wallace Steven's letters compared to his artistic works.
9) Changing Notions of the Real in Stevens's Letters
Charles Altieri, Rachael Anderson Stageberg Endowed Chair of English at the University of California, Berkeley, presents on how Wallace Steven's popularity affected his letter-writing later in his car...Show More
10) Aesthetics, Poetry, Art, or Blondes: Why Stevens's Letters Don't Theorize Rhythm
Natalie Gerber, professor of English at the State University of New York at Fredonia, presents on Wallace Stevens and other contemporary poets' "investments of belief" in sound.
Aesthetics, Poetry, Art, or Blondes: Why Stevens's Letters Don't Theorize Rhythm
40:57 | Sep 20th, 2019