Cody Carvel
Cody Carvel
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Voices and Visions 07 Robert Lowell
Exploration of the work and life of Robert Lowell through readings of his poetry illustrated by appropriate scenes and conversations with poets, friends and critics plus excerpts from interviews with Lowell himself
Переглядів: 253

Відео

Voices and Visions 13 William Carlos Williams
Переглядів 1813 місяці тому
Situations from the life of William Carlos Williams, with recitations from his poetry
Voices and Visions 01 Elizabeth Bishop
Переглядів 4063 місяці тому
The life of American Poet Elizabeth Bishop, related through photographs, readings of her poems and critical commentary by various poets and writers
Voices and Visions 12 Walt Whitman
Переглядів 1823 місяці тому
Situations from the life of Walt Whitman, with recitations from his poetry
Voices and Visions 05 Robert Frost
Переглядів 2533 місяці тому
Frost's image as elder statesman is vividly contrasted with his vigorous, poetic exploration of the darker forces of nature and the human condition. Readings and interviews with the poet reveal compelling insights into his work
Voices and Visions 09 Sylvia Plath
Переглядів 5953 місяці тому
The life and career of American poet Sylvia Plath, related through photographs, dramatizations, readings from her works and anecdotal commentary by her mother, her teachers, various friends and other poets and writers
Voices and Visions 11 Wallace Stevens
Переглядів 4163 місяці тому
Stevens's flamboyant verbal technique and philosophical vision of American life are beautifully illustrated by archival footage
Voices and Visions 08 Marianne Moore
Переглядів 3693 місяці тому
A colorful personality she was a baseball enthusiast who threw out the first ball of the 1967 season at Yankee Stadium Marianne Moore (1887-1972) was as eccentric in her poetry as she was in her life. Full of paradox and "wild decorum", her poems are modern, natural, and earthy on the one hand, and old-fashioned, artful, and moralistic on the other. Grace Schulman and others offer insights into...
Voices and Visions 10 Ezra Pound
Переглядів 5243 місяці тому
The most controversial of modern American poets, Ezra Pound (1885-1972) was the driving force in the creation of the modernist movement. This program focuses on Pound's bold theories and poetic experiments as well as on his treasonous politics, and features Pound and others reading his poetry and exploring the events of his dramatic and turbulent life
Voices and Visions 04 T.S. Eliot
Переглядів 6033 місяці тому
The life and career of American born poet T.S. Eliot related through photographs, film clips, his own readings of his work, and the commentary of critics and other poets and writers
Gertrude Stein: When This You See, Remember Me
Переглядів 2,6 тис.3 місяці тому
Portrays events in the life of Gertrude Stein in Paris during the early 20th century, using the author's words and the words of her friends
Poetry in Motion 1982
Переглядів 1,5 тис.Рік тому
A performance film of contemporary poets which celebrates poetry's ancient oral tradition. Here twenty-four leading North American poets sing, chant and read from their own works
USA: Poetry Episode Louis Zukofsky
Переглядів 890Рік тому
USA: Poetry Episode Louis Zukofsky
One More Thang
Переглядів 285Рік тому
One More Thang
Polis Is This Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place (2007)
Переглядів 2,4 тис.2 роки тому
Polis Is This Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place (2007)
In a Dark Time : A Film About Theodore Roethke
Переглядів 5 тис.4 роки тому
In a Dark Time : A Film About Theodore Roethke
USA Artists Episode 11 - Jack Tworkov
Переглядів 3,3 тис.4 роки тому
USA Artists Episode 11 - Jack Tworkov
USA Artists Episode 06 - Claes Oldenberg
Переглядів 8 тис.4 роки тому
USA Artists Episode 06 - Claes Oldenberg
USA Artists Episode 05 - The New Abstraction-Frank Stella + Larry Poons
Переглядів 14 тис.4 роки тому
USA Artists Episode 05 - The New Abstraction-Frank Stella Larry Poons
USA Artists Episode 04 - The New Abstraction-Morris Louis + Kenneth Noland
Переглядів 9 тис.4 роки тому
USA Artists Episode 04 - The New Abstraction-Morris Louis Kenneth Noland
USA Artists Episode 02 - Andy Warhol + Roy Lichtenstein
Переглядів 8 тис.4 роки тому
USA Artists Episode 02 - Andy Warhol Roy Lichtenstein
USA Artists Episode 01 - Jim Dine
Переглядів 5 тис.4 роки тому
USA Artists Episode 01 - Jim Dine
USA: Poetry Episode In Search of Hart Crane
Переглядів 26 тис.4 роки тому
USA: Poetry Episode In Search of Hart Crane
USA: Poetry Episode Anne Sexton
Переглядів 56 тис.5 років тому
USA: Poetry Episode Anne Sexton
USA: Poetry Episode Robert Creeley
Переглядів 8 тис.5 років тому
USA: Poetry Episode Robert Creeley
Robert Duncan...A Life in Poetry
Переглядів 9 тис.6 років тому
Robert Duncan...A Life in Poetry
USA: Poetry Episode William Carlos Williams
Переглядів 36 тис.6 років тому
USA: Poetry Episode William Carlos Williams

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @shangrila73eldorado
    @shangrila73eldorado 5 днів тому

    i brook no babble

  • @nickroberts1596
    @nickroberts1596 6 днів тому

    Wieners never lost that Boston accent, I love how prominent it is when he reads. He sounds like my old Irish Catholic aunts.

  • @michaelmcarthur8364
    @michaelmcarthur8364 6 днів тому

    It's the boundaries of our human collective personal experience that embraces Parmenides while Heraclitus exposes our human tragic longing certitude as we each ultimately disappear in the breaking foam of the watery tide.

  • @kelechi_77
    @kelechi_77 9 днів тому

    LOl him saying he will sell out and he did by signing the Fugs to Warner Bros in 1968

  • @mi12386
    @mi12386 11 днів тому

    Keep watching it from time to time. A genius of sculpture especially the public art

  • @kevinlawrence2229
    @kevinlawrence2229 11 днів тому

    James Merrill was so suave and sexy..... As was EB....

  • @darrelmorris-mb5mb
    @darrelmorris-mb5mb 20 днів тому

    I saw this years ago and have been looking for it. thanks!

  • @dmswanson5694
    @dmswanson5694 21 день тому

    Extremely useful to the work. Well done, Carvel.

  • @noahswinney6562
    @noahswinney6562 23 дні тому

    Thanks so much for this - is there a possibility of reuploading the net US Poetry series of Kenneth Koch and John Ashbery? :(

  • @cate1657
    @cate1657 23 дні тому

    An absolutely concise & full evocation of Gertrude Stein's days in France, her background as it influenced her foreground. Enjoyed very much the context of "ex-pat" Americans learning about art as it broke away from the known--as did Gertrude Stein's writing.

  • @thomasrealdance
    @thomasrealdance 27 днів тому

    dancing words and meanings 🙂 - thanks to all the makers/contributors and thanks for sharing

  • @nightingalerose7952
    @nightingalerose7952 Місяць тому

    People here should read her daughter, Linda Gray Sexton's memoir about her. Anne, the "fragile" poet molested her daughter who has forgiven her. Fine to like the work, but don't confuse it with the person.

  • @MarlinWilliams-ts5ul
    @MarlinWilliams-ts5ul Місяць тому

    I guess Hart had a tough time of it in Mexico. The authorities threw him out of the country apparently.

  • @JacksonPolyp
    @JacksonPolyp Місяць тому

    Imagine a Princeton graduate missing that many teeth today.

  • @DejanOfRadic
    @DejanOfRadic Місяць тому

    What a treasure of a documentary

  • @julianparks8485
    @julianparks8485 Місяць тому

    Thank you!!!

  • @jtbarbarese
    @jtbarbarese Місяць тому

    Ah, but what they knew in '62, and Untermeyer knew lots, they couldn't publish. His letters were expurgated so deeply you'd never guess how raw and funny they could be, and when they were published years ago I returned to things I thought I knew with a pleasant shock. The academy was still blushing over or apologizing for his "unnatural" vices -- a critic named Hazo called him out for his "drunkenness and perversion" -- or calling him an "obscurantist"--Blackmur attacked him, his "friend" Winters had betrayed him, and by the early Sixties who had his back except for Harold Bloom, who used four lines from "The Broken Tower" as an epigraph to The Visionary Company (which was either B's first or second book). This is still fun to watch and see his "account" books and how much he generally owed or loaned out.

    • @johnhastings462
      @johnhastings462 16 днів тому

      All that academic swill Little minnows Swimming in the wake of a leviathan

  • @faganism
    @faganism Місяць тому

    RIP 🎨 FRANK STELLA

  • @Beatpoetry1922
    @Beatpoetry1922 Місяць тому

    oh anne the way you lick your lips if i could have tasted your tongue just once oh anne your eyes! i could swim in your eyes for an eternity. but you said goodbye to this world and my heart weeps oh anne how can i miss a girl that i never met? how can i love a woman that i never knew?

  • @carolynmullet1726
    @carolynmullet1726 2 місяці тому

    Fascinating! Loved it.

  • @luboceric6468
    @luboceric6468 2 місяці тому

    must never forget this internet is "tapped".

  • @christopherreynolds4446
    @christopherreynolds4446 2 місяці тому

    The narration is as poetic as prose can be. Fitting for a documentary on Crane

  • @toddjacksonpoetry
    @toddjacksonpoetry 3 місяці тому

    Excellent poetry. Poetry of and for people awash in talk about poetry, and therefore not my own poetry. I attended Kenneth Koch's class at Columbia. He was the most delightful, gentle soul you could ever meet, but I just wasn't on the same page as him, and with the New York School, and with New York generally. He called my piece a "tour de force," meant diminishingly, and he wasn't wrong. I was following the trail of Poe - Poe the short story writer - and of Hitchcock. I was experimenting with affective power, with the prerequisites of the dramatic. But O'Hara's "Lana Turner Has Collapsed" is still my go-to poem for those moments when I want to escape myself.

  • @yassaito...
    @yassaito... 3 місяці тому

    Pls reupload the ashbery-Koch one !! Or send it to me I will pitch shift it or something !

  • @michaelconrad4445
    @michaelconrad4445 3 місяці тому

    A Nazi sympathizer and supporter of the French, Vici government. She is a traitor to humanity and democratic principles. Who gives a damn about her writing knowing this.

  • @risboturbide9396
    @risboturbide9396 3 місяці тому

    Great upload; Hart Crane's poetry is a gift everybody must share.

  • @risboturbide9396
    @risboturbide9396 3 місяці тому

    Thank you for this! 🍻🍻

  • @callmejeffbob
    @callmejeffbob 3 місяці тому

    Well done piece on two important artists. However it's a real shame that it was not filmed in color.

  • @46metube
    @46metube 3 місяці тому

    excellent. thank you.

  • @AnandKumar-hs2nd
    @AnandKumar-hs2nd 3 місяці тому

    You are god sent angel. Thanks for uploading these

  • @rhmendelson
    @rhmendelson 3 місяці тому

    An insightful tribute to Emily! ❤

  • @HerAeolianHarp
    @HerAeolianHarp 3 місяці тому

    So glad to see this again.

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    Its not hard to write like a 1920s women's libber with little lesbo for spite.

    • @stephencarroll230
      @stephencarroll230 3 місяці тому

      You have issues.

    • @MagdaleneDivine
      @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

      @@stephencarroll230 well that's an overgeneralized statement. Everyone has issues, like, not liking dumbass Gertrude Stein means I'm defective in some way? She's egotistical and pompous and the constant name dropping, and if you were actually familiar with her before watching this kiss ass subpar documentary of fluffer butter you'd know SHES ALWAYS DROPPING NAMES as Gertrude Stein is a notorious over name dropper. See it's a form of humble bragging as a way to show she's in the league of say PABLO FUKKIN PICASSO. she's forgettable at best.

    • @MagdaleneDivine
      @MagdaleneDivine 27 днів тому

      @@stephencarroll230 so did Gertrude. She had an ego almost as big as her huge clitoris she kept confusing with as a penis. At least my clitoris is normal.

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    Throw her over there with Gloria Allread and K.D. Lang and you know ....READ SOMETHING BETTER

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    See look i can talk just like her! With prose even! And A GENIUS I AM NOT! And that.....i say just as she would say if she was a he speaking as a she......NOT A DAMN THING! just name drops and opines LIKE A COMMON BORE!

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    My parents had this rather large library of hard backed leather bound books. And Gertrude*la sigh, la sigh le fukkin sigh* Stein NOT EVER NOT ONCE! EVER GOT TO THE DAMN POINT. she talks to be talking so that a man cannot!

    • @christinehaley8097
      @christinehaley8097 Місяць тому

      I've had those same observations. Did not ever really grasp her appeal. She was a character, more than a writer.

    • @MagdaleneDivine
      @MagdaleneDivine 27 днів тому

      @@christinehaley8097 she just makes word salads about how eloquent she is and all the famous people she impressed with her salads

    • @cate1657
      @cate1657 23 дні тому

      Gertrude Stein's poetry is about (in my estimation) the sounds of words, the meanings of words, playing with both of these intellectually, while putting forward ideas within those words to really get across their importance as words with meaning--well, she repeats it, she repeats it, this is the "it" that she repeats. Also, poetry expresses the rhythms of words being together or standing alone, spoken in the mind or aloud--it's a "music" of sorts; Gertrude Stein's writing plays the "notes" of vocabulary in this way as well while making sounds with words as they are repeated alone or used together--it is art to do this.

    • @MagdaleneDivine
      @MagdaleneDivine 23 дні тому

      @@cate1657 blah blah blah blah her constant name dropping RUINS ALL OF IT

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    Shes insufferable. Just bitching. Repeating repeating repeating then repeats it again to do it again,,🙄

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    21:01 meh. I mean you talk in circles Gertrude and its only cauae you're considered ugly that anyone allowed you to talk Cause at this time if you were pretty no one listened to her. Wasn't she a lesbian....just at a time when lesbian didnt have a word for it.

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    I don't think Gertrude Stein is any more eloquent than say , maya Angelou or sir mixalot. I never understood what her big deal was. Its like she was a novelty. A girl that was allowed to talk because they thought she was a boy

    • @michaelconrad4445
      @michaelconrad4445 3 місяці тому

      She was a despicable Nazi sympathizer, and because of that who gives a damn how good she could write. She is an embarrassment.

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    It reminds me of the performing arts school i want to

  • @MagdaleneDivine
    @MagdaleneDivine 3 місяці тому

    I subbed just cause i couldn't tell what this is about even

  • @sonampalmo3578
    @sonampalmo3578 3 місяці тому

    I love this lady's soulfulness and sincerity. Reading her sestinas made me love that form and inspired me to write several. Thanks, Cody.

  • @HerAeolianHarp
    @HerAeolianHarp 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for this upload. "Voices and Visions" was always such a great program.

  • @rievans57
    @rievans57 4 місяці тому

    Interesting.

  • @zackborzone8904
    @zackborzone8904 4 місяці тому

    This is a wonderful channel. Thank you for uploading all of this great stuff, Cody Carvel.

  • @liammcooper
    @liammcooper 4 місяці тому

    Fantastic, I've been trying to see this -- but it's not available elsewhere.

  • @drrbrt
    @drrbrt 4 місяці тому

    This is some priceless world heritage footage.

  • @drrbrt
    @drrbrt 4 місяці тому

    Glorious!

  • @alyonastudies7769
    @alyonastudies7769 4 місяці тому

    Amazing experience

    • @bradkelley8732
      @bradkelley8732 2 місяці тому

      I had an issue when my laptop was hooked up to external speakers but it was fine when it was just playing through my laptop itself.

  • @liammcooper
    @liammcooper 4 місяці тому

    I've seen most of these, and Brother Antonius is by far the most compelling. He "tells" instead of shows. He's not trying to show-off his poetry, he's speaking clearly as to what he thinks poetry does, "an x-factor that reveals *something*, and moves unerringly toward it." Making the poem the thing itself capable of agency. The poet is just there to usher the poem to where it's trying to go. He reminds me of "stand-up tragedian" Brother Theodore, who was non-denominational as far as I'm aware.