The Believer

Believing in Blert

By Stephen Burt
The Believer
January 1 2009

Language means things, but no language is only its meanings: any word, said aloud, has a sound, and every phrase is also, in physicists' terms, a set of waves moving through air, produced by tongue, pharynx, larynx, lungs, etc., as they act on the mix of gases we inhale or exhale. Since (at least) the heyday of Gertrude Stein, some poets have tried to focus on speech as physical event, on how brains make tongues create not meanings but sounds. These poets do not just complicate, but nearly sever, links between sound ('t' + 'r' + 'ee') and meaning (what happens when you think of a tree).

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The repeated phrase “i don’t stop reading/deliring” is an ecstatic mantra in Nicole Brossard’s Lovhers (Amantes), which is part of her pivotal trilogy of lesbian feminist work that includes These Our Mothers and Surfaces of Sense.

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