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dc.contributor.advisorKeith, Sally
dc.contributor.authorCapobianco, Edward Jesse
dc.creatorCapobianco, Edward Jesse
dc.date2018-05-02
dc.date.accessioned2018-09-06T00:52:19Z
dc.descriptionThis thesis has been embargoed for 10 years and will not be available until May 2028 at the earliest.
dc.description.abstractThese poems are scripts for their own creation. They do not necessarily share a singular speaker or addressee, but together they create an I and a Thou that are sometimes explicit, sometimes implicit, and sometimes blurred with other self/other pairs in particular poems. The poems are interested in the death of the death of God, in the impossibility of memory, and in the possibility of a de-commodified communication. The poems are interested in the body as a birthed thing, in the spiral pattern of its growth, and in its memory. Associative dream-thinking and what Hannah Arendt calls the internal senses (here, in particular, the sense of taste) become a kind of logic by which the poems can proceed. These poems play with what can be covered up, what can be uncovered, and how the distance between the two can be collapsed into a flat field.
dc.description.embargo2028-05-02
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1920/11115
dc.language.isoen
dc.subjectPoetry
dc.subjectPoetics
dc.subjectTongue
dc.subjectHermeneutics
dc.subjectVirgules
dc.subjectHyphosis
dc.title//
dc.typeThesis
thesis.degree.disciplineCreative Writing
thesis.degree.grantorGeorge Mason University
thesis.degree.levelMaster's
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Fine Arts in Creative Writing

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