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Dissertation Defense |
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Candidate: Karen Carcia Degree of: Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment: English Title: Nearer Date: Friday, May 21, 2004 1:30-3:30 p.m. It's against this theoretical backdrop that the title, Nearer, emerges as a unifying concept across the span of my individual poems. It is both an evocation of the abiding need to bridge the gap between utterance and meaning, as well as geographic and interpersonal distances. Thus we may not rely solely on direct statement but must create other avenues of expression. Another very different path through which language creates meaning is by calling attention to itself, to its own materiality. Although my poems do not share the strict modernist project of someone like Gertrude Stein or the post-modern political agendas of the language Poets, they sometimes employ similar techniques in order to force new meanings through juxtaposition and sound/word play. Nearer strives to ask questions of language and the world in order to push the limitations of our systems of thought. My poems examine the gap between the signifier and the sign-between the word and the concept-and seek to find a kind of symmetry amidst a necessarily chaotic existence. I approach this complexity by using images of landscape to help meaning accrue throughout the poems. Often the images are glances gleaned from memory, a reconstruction and calling up of a past only accessible through a recollection itself, is quiet, is tenuous. Throughout my studies, I came to recognize the vital importance of bringing my critical research in contemporary and historical literatures to bear on my creative work in ways that both enriched and challenged my own poetic project. The dissertation will include not just my original poems, but also a critical introduction framing my work within the wider landscape of contemporary poetry.
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