Cityscape poetics

From Black Mountain College to St. Mark’s Church: The Cityscape Poetics of Blackburn, di Prima, and Oppenheimer by Burt Kimmelman

116th street fish smells, pinpoint la marqueta

up under the park avenue, filigreed, viaduct

elevated tracks

where graffitied trains run over language

there is a pandemonium of gumbo colors sitting up

jambalaya rhythms

spanish harlem, erupting

street vendors on timbale sidewalks

where the truth of things is what’s happening now…

–Quincy Troupe, “116th Street & Park Avenue”

“New York was, in Koch’s words, a place ‘of dizzying anonymity, the feeling of freedom,’ the ‘availability of experience’, as Marianne Moore says in a poem about New York, the ‘feeling of excitement and nervousness’. The city was a place of noise, chaos and intimacy where people were thrown together on crowded streets and public transportation…”

(via woods lot)

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