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William Carlos Williams: Themes

William Carlos Williams was an American poet known for his experimental style and focus on everyday subjects and themes from American life. Some of the key themes and styles in his work included: 1) He frequently wrote about ordinary people and depicted social problems or the interactions of nature, humanity, and urban environments. 2) His style was very direct and colloquial, using the language of common people and avoiding rhetoric or commentary. He focused on visual imagery and sparse concrete details. 3) Over his career, he experimented heavily with form and meter in his poems. His works also shifted from a focus on nouns and adjectives to verbs and themes of positivity and love later in his life

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
141 views4 pages

William Carlos Williams: Themes

William Carlos Williams was an American poet known for his experimental style and focus on everyday subjects and themes from American life. Some of the key themes and styles in his work included: 1) He frequently wrote about ordinary people and depicted social problems or the interactions of nature, humanity, and urban environments. 2) His style was very direct and colloquial, using the language of common people and avoiding rhetoric or commentary. He focused on visual imagery and sparse concrete details. 3) Over his career, he experimented heavily with form and meter in his poems. His works also shifted from a focus on nouns and adjectives to verbs and themes of positivity and love later in his life

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WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS

M1=Mariani
M=Mazzaro
W=Wagner
W2=Wagner reference guide


THEMES

- subject of pat: how can you tell the truth abt things? - M63
- woman almost mystically essential; provides energy for mans creativity - w21
- depiction of local: social problems, finance - w21
- worlds of nature, human experience, urban living - w21
- disgust with man; even nature becomes cold and lifeless - w26
- from 1938 to 43, shift from nouns and adjs to verbs, growing emph on pos and love - w29
- growing emph on art - w29
- shift from vituperation to gentleness - w30
- often emphs flowers - w47
- man, nature, art, urban soc - w55
- banal subjects - m1/64
- intimate knowledge of humanity; mix of gentleness, violence - m1/68
- emph on america - m1/84
- shocking bourgeois; revolt vs. suburbia; poetry only salvation - m1/90
- struggle vs. cultural and economic drift of Am - m1/164
- profound philosophical resignation to existence; meets rathan controls objects - m1/210
- effort to handle sentiment and accept feeling while avoiding stock response - m1/213
- affirmation of the finite - m1/214
- local; marriage of reality and imag to create new orders - m1/225
- divorce; sexuality; nature vs. convention; city vs. country - m1/225
- subjects tradly unfit for poetry - m1/229

- America -w2.8
- romantic: rejects accepted sense of things; anti-poetic; affinity to realism - w2.13
- narrowness of scope makes for concentration and meagerness - w2.13
- uncompromising romantic bec of distrust of intellect, exclusive use of concrete - w2.19
- often lost when he tries to treat ideas; half-digested, vague ideas - w2.27
- truth resides in what he has seen directly, immediately where he was born and lives - w2.29
- disintegration of Am life - w2.29
- emphs life, not death, in an act of love - w2.33
- deals too often in abstractions - w2.19
- attention to ugliness - w2.41
- emph on need to heal split between individ and culture - w2.42
- beauty, whether of women or flowers, has the power to right all things - w2.45
- fascination with women - w2.46
- daily existence - w2.52
- emotions that cluster about common things - w2.59
- reverence for fact, for event, for actions, for history, for the creatural - w2.62
- all-importance of the bodily element - w2.70
- strong sense of community - w2.71
- radical independence, emotional exuberance, bodily energy, self-admiration - w2.94
- like whitman, asserts self - w2.94
- man-city, river, mountains, economics, the language themes in Pat - w2.109
- contradicts the despair so pervasive in Eliot - w2.111
- like stevens, hostile to organized religion - w2.120
- franciscan sense of wonder that illuminates the ordinary - w2.133
- reviving the wonder of the near-at-hand - w2.138
- in Pat, refutation of all linear concepts - w2.147
- world is always fresh, full, vivid - w2.152


STYLE

- radical experimentation in form, lang, subject - M6
- exuberant tone, at times bordering on bombast - M6
- affinity for the oracular, esp. in public poems exhorting townspeople - M6
- emph on spontaneous vs. cerebral (assocd w/ Eliot) - M24
- org of Pat is musical to an almost unprecedented degree - M62
- mosaic organizational techniques - m67
- pat gets steadily worse; doesnt seem whole - m68
- directness, flat idiom, clear, objective imagery, simplicity, homely diction - m107
- spontaneity; lang of common man put him in rom trad - m108
- stanzas often similar in struc; his verse far from free - m108
- lack of punc, disarming simplicity, nervous rhythm - m109
- pictures, in imagery and shape - m110
- lack of punc emphs any punc that may occur - m110
- breaks up components; unpoetic vocab makes certain words leap out by contrast - m110
- peculiar directness of approach, often thru lack of grammar - m110-11
- tends to cluster related sounds together; alliteration; even rhyme (esp internal) - m112
- half-rhymes, slant rhyme - m113
- herky-jerky rhytm; poems begin and end abruptly - m113

- uses fig lang sparingly in attempts to capture colloq speech rhythms - w14
- dangers of met, sim used indiscriminately and of inversion, allusion -w14
- one critic claims w concentrates on static objects; other says later poems tend more kinetic - w41
- laconic; brief; colloquial - w44
- idiomatic; vivid images to exemplify abstract concepts - w46
- much emph on abstraction - w47
- avoided symbols as esoteric - w48
- avoids unnec commentary, background, subjective impressions -w50-51
- distrusted fig lang as too personal, often artificial - w54
- metaphors tend to have impt struc positions; non-fig lines antic or elab the metaphors -w57
- montage an impt struc prin in 20s and 30s -w61
- presentation of details w/out comment - w60
- growing emph on prsnl reactions and fig lang - w63
- experimentation for 40 years with meter, rhythm - w75
- avoided long lines bec of nervous nature; excited pace of speech - w77
- direct address; first-person narrative focus - w79

- observant, delicate, haunting -m1/6
- surface; minute fixations; emotions implied -m1/15
- clear, sharp, imagist poems favored by early critics - m1/16
- each action deserving a line - m1/34
- stevens saw him as antipoetic romantic - m1/39
- real/unreal; sentimental/antipoetic - m1/42
- accretion; expansion of prosaic; surprise, telescoping of jocularity - m1/43
- abrupt, clear, frank, incisive, wift contrast, grotesque - m1/45
- absence of rhetoric - m1/66
- lack of syntax, meaning, form - m1/68
- direct observation of individ objects; color contrast; spare use of concrete detail - m1/82
- scraps of dialogue; mimetic sounds; visual reprodictions - m1/82
- commentary; statement of emotion; use of anecdote - m1/83
- flat realism; unswerving sentimentality; inability to work w phil questions - m1/85
- over-reliance on visual to exclusion of sound, rhythm, song - m1/85
- collage of fragments; irony of disjunction - m1/85

- dislikes unnecessary explanation, urbanity (sleekness), searching for right word - w2.12
- anti-poetic; ambiguity produced by bareness; implied image - w2.13
- absence of rhetoric itself a kind of affectation - w2.21
- line length is arbitrary - w2.23
- Pat lacks necessity in its transitions; wilful self-indulgence; impassioned irrelevance - w2.28
- colloq, whimsical lines often enlivened by arrangements for eye - w2.30
- strong verbs - w2.41
- detestation of phil and generalization - w2.41
- american idiom - w2.59
- convincing speech - w2.62
- says only the dullest things and has renounced all the pleasures of English - w2.67
- avoidance of false or forced sentiment - w2.70
- danger of lapsing into faux-naif mode; brits cant hear his rhythms - w2.77
- unanalyzed juxtapositions - w2.82
- flat language and non-existent music - w2.92
- use of trad poetic devices (allit, etc) - w2.96
- limited imagination, numbing self-consciousness - w2.97
- shows evidence of the basic classicism and simplicity of the orient - w2.98
- direct, changing rhythms to suit thought; says simplest things simply and obliquely - w2.106
- triteness of common american style - w2.117
- emphs spontaneity - w2.149
- Pat made by accretion - w2.151
- prosody imitates contours of conversational lang - w2.152

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