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A collection of language-driven, imaginative poetry from the winner of the 2015 National Poetry Series Open Competition.
Jennifer Kronovet’s poetry is inflected by her fraught, ecstatic relationship with language—sentences, words, phonemes, punctuation—and how meaning is both gained and lost in the process of communicating. Having lived all over the world, both using her native tongue and finding it impossible to use, Kronovet approaches poems as tactile, foreign objects, as well as intimate, close utterances.
InThe Wug Test,named for a method by which a linguist discovered how deeply imprinted the cognitive instinct toward acquiring language is in children, Kronovet questions whether words are objects we should escape from or embrace. Dispatches of text from that researcher, Walt Whitman, Ferdinand de Saussure, and the poet herself, among other voices, are mined for their futility as well as their beauty, in poems that are technically revealing and purely pleasurable. Throughout, a boy learns how to name and ask for those things that makes up his world.
A collection of language-driven, innovative poetry from the winner of the 2015 National Poetry Series competition.
Instructions for mourning a dead language, fires caused by words, a boy who grows up alone in a forest, a lesson in “English Female Speech”: these are some of the subjects explored in Jennifer Kronovet’sThe Wug Test, a book of poems that goes inside the essential questions of language. How does language shape the way you think? How would you invent the perfect language? How does language blind you?
The Wug Test performs these questions and their answers, combining lyric facts with a scientific imagination. Rooted in linguistics and in the experience of seeing language grow up inside a child, the poems evoke the frightening and potent space before speech, revealing the ways language uses l³"
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