Barrett Watten
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Barrett Watten | |
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Born | October 3, 1948 |
Occupation | Professor |
Spouse | Carla Harryman |
Academic background | |
Education | University of California, Berkeley University of Iowa |
Academic work | |
Institutions | Wayne State University |
Barrett Watten (born October 3, 1948) is an American poet and educator associated with the Language poets. He is a professor of English at Wayne State University where he teaches modernism and cultural studies.
Early life and education
[edit]Watten was born in Long Beach, California in 1948, the son of a US Navy research physicist.[1] As a child, he moved frequently, including time in Japan and Taiwan. He graduated high school in Oakland, California in 1965, and briefly attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[1] He graduated with a AB in biochemistry from University of California, Berkeley in 1969.[2] While at Berkeley, he met fellow poet Robert Grenier,[3] and participated in student protests against the Vietnam War.[1] He then attended the Iowa Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa, graduating in 1972 with a MFA.[2] He finished a Ph.D. at Berkeley in 1995.[1]
Career
[edit]In 1976, he and other poets founded the reading series at the Grand Piano coffeehouse in San Francisco that ran through 1980.[4] From 2006 to 2010 ten members of the group published The Grand Piano, a "collective autobiography" of that period.[4]
In 1971, Watten and Robert Grenier began the poetry journal This,[5] which he edited with Grenier for the first three years and then alone until 1982.[6][7] In 1989, he began graduate studies at Berkeley, receiving a PhD in English in 1995.[2] In 1995, the poetry magazine Aerial published a special issue about Watten.[8] Between 1981 and 1998, Watten served as an editor for Poetics Journal along with Lyn Hejinian.[9] In 2013, an anthology of essays from the journal was published, followed by an e-book of the entire journal's content in 2015.[9]
Watten joined the English department at Wayne State University in 1994.[3] In 2019, some students reported Watten to the university administration for misbehavior and later published their collective testimonials in a blog, including allegations of Watten being "hostile, verbally abusive, and manipulative with female students".[10] The university hired an independent investigator and removed him from teaching in November 2019.[10][11] Watten's faculty union, the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), filed grievances citing a lack of required due process and a restraint of free speech, and requested the restrictions be withdrawn.[11] The details of the disciplinary action were published after a FOIA request, which was protested by Watten as "outrageous".[11] Watten returned to teaching classes in 2023.[6]
Major work and publications
[edit]Watten's poetry is associated with a loosely-affiliated group of avant-garde poets referred to as the West Coast Language Poets.[1] This group includes Robert Grenier, Ron Silliman, Steve Benson, Carla Harryman, Lyn Hejinian, Michael Palmer, Bob Perelman, Kit Robinson, and Leslie Scalapino.[1] The group shared an opposition to America's involvement in the Vietnam War, as well as "skepticism about the appropriation of truth by meaning".[1] They also distinguished themselves from the preceding New American Poets through an emphasis on self-reflexive experiences with language rather than the physical body.[1] Watten's early creative work is collected in Frame (1971–1990), which appeared in 1997 and brings together six previously published works of poetry from the previous two decades: Opera—Works (1975); Decay (1977); Plasma/Paralleles/"X" (1979); 1–10 (1980); Complete Thought (1982); and Conduit (1988)—along with two previously uncollected texts—City Fields and Frame. Two book–length poems—Progress (1985) and Under Erasure (1991)—were republished with a new preface as Progress/Under Erasure (2004). Bad History, a book-length prose poem, appeared in 1998.
Watten is co-author, with Michael Davidson, Lyn Hejinian, and Ron Silliman, of Leningrad: American Writers in the Soviet Union (1991). He has published three volumes of literary and cultural criticism: Total Syntax (1985);The Constructivist Moment: From Material Text to Cultural Poetics (2003); and Questions of Poetics: Language Writing and Consequences (2016).[12][13][14] Watten is also co-author, with Tom Mandel, Lyn Hejinian, Ron Silliman, Kit Robinson, Carla Harryman, Rae Armantrout, Ted Pearson, Steve Benson, and Bob Perelman of The Grand Piano: An Experiment in Collective Autobiography. (Detroit, MI: Mode A/This Press, 2006–2010).[15] This work, which consists of ten volumes, is described as an "experiment in collective autobiography by ten writers identified with Language poetry in San Francisco."[16]
Watten's work has been translated into numerous foreign languages, with two chapbooks in French and Italian. Plasma/Parallèles/“X,” trans. Martin Richet (2007), comprises three long poems that originally appeared in a chapbook by Tuumba Press in 1979.[17] A chapbook consisting only of Plasma, trans. by Gherardo Bortolotti, came out in 2010.
Articles
[edit]- "The Poetics of New Meaning", Qui Parle (University of California, Berkeley) 12:2 (Spring/Summer 2001; appeared Fall 2001), pages=1–14
- "Poetics and the Question of Value; or, What is a Philosophically Serious Poet?", The Wallace Stevens Journal 39:1 {Spring 2015), pages=84–101
Edited volumes
[edit]- A Guide to Poetics Journal: Writing in the Expanded Field, 1982–98, ed. with Lyn Hejinian (Wesleyan University Press, 2013)
- Diasporic Avant-Gardes: Experimental Poetics and Cultural Displacement, ed. with Carrie Noland (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009)
Awards and recognition
[edit]The American Comparative Literature Association awarded him the 2004 René Wellek Prize for his book The Constructivist Moment: From Material Text to Cultural Poetics.[18][19]
Personal life
[edit]As of 1996, Watten is married to the poet Carla Harryman and they have a son together.[20]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h Debrot, Jacques. "Barrett Watten." American Poets Since World War II: Sixth Series, edited by Joseph Mark Conte, Gale, 1998. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 193. Gale Literature Resource Center, Gale Document Number H1200008044
- ^ a b c "Barrett Watten - Professor". College of Liberal Arts & Sciences - Wayne State University. Archived from the original on 15 March 2016.
- ^ a b "2003 Holloway Series - Barrett Watten". English Department, University of California, Berkeley. 2003. Archived from the original on 29 October 2003.
- ^ a b Harley, Luke (7 February 2013). "Poetry as virtual community. A review of 'The Grand Piano: An Experiment in Collective Autobiography'". Jacket2.
- ^ Arnold, David (2007). "'Just Rehashed Surrealism'? The Writing of Barrett Watten". Poetry and Language Writing: Objective and Surreal. Liverpool University Press. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-84631-115-4.
- ^ a b "Barrett Watten". College of Liberal Arts & Sciences - Wayne State University. Retrieved 21 September 2024.
- ^ Hampson, Robert; Montgomery, Will (18 September 2012). "Innovations in Poetry". In Brooker, Peter; Gąsiorek, Andrzej; Longworth, Deborah; Thacker, Andrew (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Modernisms. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191743924. Retrieved 29 September 2024.
- ^ Smith, Rod (1995). "Barrett Watten: Contemporary Poetics as Critical Theory". Aerial. No. 8. ISBN 978-0-9619097-4-1. Archived from the original on 29 November 2020.
- ^ a b "Poetics Journal Digital Archive". Wesleyan University Press. Retrieved 29 September 2024.
- ^ a b Nguyen, Terry (21 June 2019). "'I Was Sick to My Stomach': A Scholar's Bullying Reputation Goes Under the Microscope". Chronicle of Higher Education. Vol. 65, no. 34. pp. A26–A27. Archived from the original on 2021-02-24. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
- ^ a b c Zahneis, Meghan (11 December 2019). "This Professor Was Accused of Bullying Grad Students. Now He's Being Banned From Teaching". Chronicle of Higher Education. Archived from the original on 2021-04-17. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
- ^ Schwabsky, Barry (6 November 2016). "Reader's Diary: Barrett Watten's Questions of Poetics". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
- ^ Heuving, Jeanne (December 2019). "Book Review: Questions of Poetics: Language Writing and Consequences Intricate Thicket: Reading Late Modernist Poetries". American Literature. 91 (4): 905–907. doi:10.1215/00029831-7917478. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
- ^ Williams, Tyrone (18 January 2019). "Examples of On Barrett Watten's questions". Jacket2. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
- ^ For additional details, commentary, and links see Barrett Watten's piece How The Grand Piano Is Being Written Archived June 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ in a publicity release at Watten's homepage (see "External links" above)
- ^ Le Quartanier éditeur & revue
- ^ "The René Wellek Prize Citation 2004". American Comparative Literature Association. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
- ^ "Comparative Literature Prizes for 2004". Comparative Literature. 58 (3). Duke University Press: xi–xiii. 2006. JSTOR 4125381.
- ^ Simpson, Megan (Winter 1996). "An interview with Carla Harryman". Contemporary Literature. 4 (37). Retrieved 26 September 2024.
External links
[edit]- American male poets
- Language poets
- Writers from Long Beach, California
- 1948 births
- Living people
- American literary critics
- Wayne State University faculty
- University of California, Berkeley alumni
- University of Iowa alumni
- Iowa Writers' Workshop alumni
- American magazine founders
- American male non-fiction writers