Larry Eigner (August 7, 1927 – February 3, 1996), also known as Laurence Joel Eigner,[1] was an American poet of the second half of the twentieth century and one of the principal figures of the Black Mountain School.[2]

Eigner

Eigner is associated with the Black Mountain poets and was influential among Language poets.[3] Highlighting Eigner's influence on the "Language School" of poetry, his work often appeared in the journal L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E, and was featured on the front page of its inaugural issue in February 1978.

Ron Silliman dedicated the 1986 anthology of Language poetry, In the American Tree, to Eigner.[4] In the introduction to In the American Tree, Silliman identifies Eigner as a poet who has "transcended the problematic constraints" of Olson's speech-based projectivist poetics.[5] Eigner has himself pointed out that his poetry originates in 'thinking' rather than speech.[citation needed]

During his lifetime, Eigner wrote dozens of books and published poems in more than 100 magazines and collections. Charles Bukowski once called him the "greatest living poet."[6]

Life and work

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"Following out from experiments in the work of Cummings, Pound and Williams [...] Larry Eigner's mature writing is perhaps the best (and most varied) fulfillment we have, to date, of tendencies and possibilities regarding the use of space in poetry gathered into and 'projected' out into the future of American poetry by Olson's theory of composition by field."

Robert Grenier[7]

Eigner was critically palsied as a result of a bungled forceps delivery at birth. He grew up in Swampscott, Massachusetts. Despite his impairments, Eigner's mother, Bessie, was an advocate for his education. Eigner began writing poetry around the age of 8, which he transcribed to his mother and brother, Richard. He attended middle school at Massachusetts Hospital School and completed high school and some college (at the University of Chicago) through correspondence. His first works were published at age 9. As he matured into an artist, Eigner overcame many physical obstacles and limitations to achieve a mastery over the material text, producing his typescripts on a 1940 Royal manual typewriter using only his right index finger and thumb.[8]

Perhaps the best realization to date of the idea of "composition by field" proposed by Charles Olson in his landmark essay "Projective Verse,"[9] the physical act of writing took tremendous effort from Eigner.[10]

Larry Eigner authored more than 40 books, among them From the Sustaining Air (1953), Another Time in Fragments (1967), Country/Harbor/Quiet/Act/Around-selected prose (1978), and Waters/Places/a Time (1983). His work appeared in well over a hundred magazines and collections, most notably Origin, The Black Mountain Review, L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E, and in Don Allen's anthology The New American Poetry.[11] In 2010, Stanford University Press published The Collected Poems of Larry Eigner, Volumes 1–4 (Vol. I: 1937–1958; Vol. II: 1958–1966; Vol. III: 1966–1978; Vol. IV: 1978–1995). The four volumes were edited by Robert Grenier and Curtis Faville.

Larry Eigner died from pneumonia and other complications on February 3, 1996.[12]

Poet Jennifer Bartlett is currently working on a biography of Eigner.[13][14]

Jon David Polansky is currently the acting executor for the literary estate of Larry Eigner.

References

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  1. ^ LCNAF on-line (Library of Congress Authority Files) lists Eigner's full name as Laurence Joel Eigner
  2. ^ and for many poets, including Eigner, this centered around Charles Olson at Black Mountain College in the mid-20th Century.
  3. ^ particularly Ron Silliman and Charles Bernstein, both of whom are on record as admirers of his work
  4. ^ Silliman, Ronald, ed. In the American Tree. Orono: National Poetry Foundation, 1986.
  5. ^ Silliman, Ronald, ed. In the American Tree. Orono: National Poetry Foundation, 1986. xvii.
  6. ^ "Bukowski's first published interview, by Arnold L. Kaye, Los Angeles Correspondent to the Chicago Literary Times, March, 1963". Bukowski.net. Retrieved 2018-02-17.
  7. ^ Robert Grenier. "Introduction" to The Collected Poems of Larry Eigner Archived 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Eigner was able to "create shifting constellations of words in space whose musical and visual designs are realized in a language at once immediate and highly abstract, according to his publisher's page at Stanford University Press's Eigner page
  9. ^ "Introduction to The Collected Poems of Larry Eigner by Robert Grenier". Sibila.com.br. Archived from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2011-06-24.
  10. ^ the physicality of each line is something that Ron Silliman notes in many places, including his widely read poetry weblog See External links below
  11. ^ "Roof Books". Roof Books. Retrieved 2011-06-24.
  12. ^ "Larry Eigner (1927-1996) - An online tribute edited by Loss Pequeño Glazier (Eigner's online tribute/obituary page at SUNY-Buffalo's Electronic Poetry Center)". Epc.buffalo.edu. Retrieved 2011-06-24.
  13. ^ The Larry Eigner Project Kickstarter
  14. ^ Jennifer Bartlett. "Bartlett on Eigner", Jennifer Bartlett, Poet. November 17, 2015.
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Eigner exhibits, sites and homepages
Selected online publications, poems and poetry
Reviews and perspectives
Obituaries