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학술저널

James Longenbach’s Criticism of Life in Forever: A Joint Resistance of Poetry and Life Against Death

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This article aims to investigate James Longenbach’s revision of lyric memory in Forever by focusing on his strenuous elicitation of a paradoxical productivity informed by mortality, while exploring it in a manner similar to his own method of textual analysis and the core principles of his poetics, which center on “repetition” and “wonder,” attempting to present the whole article as a testament to his poetic legacy. In this regard, it underscores how his poems traverse the terrain of temporal fragility, navigating moments where creative potential intersects with existential modesty. Such an approach repositions Longenbach not only as an accomplished critic but also as a poet whose craft engages deeply with the cycle of loss, memory, and renewal. To this end, it pays attention to Longenbach’s substantial erotic investment in the poems, which mitigates the annihilating force of mortality, translating it into the precondition for memory and the reassurance of the enduring afterlives of poetry and one’s past. The article argues that this transformation is induced by the poet’s reevaluation of repetition, one that leads to an aestheticization of the past beyond the mechanical reiteration of it against the backdrop of one’s humble acknowledgment of mortality, an acknowledgment that charts the way for a joint resistance of poetry and life against death. By discussing Longenbach’s serious yet plain exploration of death in Forever, the article attempts to spark scholarly attention to his non-critical writing while illuminating his lesser-known virtuosity as a poet, which has long been overshadowed by his critical achievements.

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