Bruce Andrews
Bruce Andrews (born 1948) is an American poet.
Born in Chicago, he studied international relations and political science, among others. at Harvard. His first book appeared in 1973.
Along with Charles Bernstein, he published in 1978-1981 L = A = N = G = U = A = G = E, the flagship body of the poetic movement of the same name. In 1984, most of the contents of the thirteen scripts were collected in The Book = L = A = G = E Book. Movement L = A = N = G = U = A = G = E is the most significant avant-garde group of American poets of the last quarter of the twentieth century. It is related, among others. to treat the language as a game and apply mathematical structuralism to the building of a poem.
Andrews was also a politician - since 1975 he has been a professor of political science at New York's Fordham University. He deals with radical political systems. His poetry is based on the assumption that systematic breaking of language norms is a specific political act that can bring about change. He published about 40 volumes of poetry - individually or together with other poets - eg, Do not Have Any Paper So Shut Up (Or, Social Romanticism) (1992) and Ex Why Zee: Performance Texts, Collaborations with Sally Silvers, Word Maps, Bricolage & amp; Improvisation (1995). He is also the author of numerous essays. Authoritative control (person):
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