I. Works by Anne Carson > G. Interviews > I.G.2013.001
Carson, Anne; Fleming on “To the Best of Our Knowledge: Poems Old and New, Jim
Transcript for Poesis with Anne Carson. 2013-05-01.
ARCHIVE: Wisconsin Public Radio: http://archive.ttbook.org/book/transcript/transcript-poesis-anne-carson
Notes from Source: Jim Fleming: Our final interview in Poems Old and New is with a writer who’s constantly rearranging poetry’s furniture. Anne Carson has written short talks, verse novels, essays as tangos, prose poems, illustrated poetry collections, and more. Carson is also a classic scholar, who’s translated or re-translated Sappho, Euripides, Sophocles, and other ancient writers. In book after book, Carson forges new poetic forms. I asked her about the shapes poems can take. Anne Carson: For the ancients form was, they didn’t have a word for that really. They had genres but genres arose out of occasions.
Further Notes: To the Best of Our Knowledge: Poems Old and New
Subject Tags: Absence, Drawing, Form, Fragments, Genre, Homer, Poetics, Sappho (610-580 BC), The Greeks, Writing
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