Kern
Derek Beaulieu
Published on September 21, 2023 by punctum books
- Pages
- 106 pages
- Languages
- English
- Dimensions
- 8⤫8 in.
- ISBN (Paperback)
- ISBN: 978-1-68571-176-4 (Paperback)
- ISBN (PDF)
- ISBN: 978-1-68571-177-1 (PDF)
- LCCN
- LCCN: 2023944929
- BISAC subject codes
- BISAC: POE011000
- Thema subject codes
- THEMA: DCC, DCF
Proposed as a collection of imaginary logos for the corporate sponsors of Borges’s Library of Babel, Kern balances on a precipice between the visual and nonsensical, offering poems just out of meaning’s reach. Using dry-transfer lettering, Beaulieu made these concrete pieces by hand, building the images gesturally in response to shapes and patterns in the letters themselves. This is poetry closer to architecture and design than confession, in which letters are released from their usual semantic duties as they slide into unexpected affinities and new patterns. Kern highlights the gaps inside what we see and what we know, filling the familiar with the singular and the just seen with the faintly remembered.
This title is a second edition, released as part of punctum’s Special Collections(opens in new tab) project.
Biographies
Derek Beaulieu is the author and editor of over twenty-five collections of poetry, prose, and criticism. His most recent volume of fiction, Silence, is forthcoming from Sweden’s Timglaset Books, and his most recent volume of poetry, Surface Tension, was published by Toronto’s Coach House Books. Beaulieu has won multiple local and national awards for his teaching and dedication to students, including the Queen Elizabeth II Platinum Jubilee Medal for his dedication to Albertan literature, and is the only graduate from the University of Calgary’s Department of English to receive the Faculty of Arts “Celebrated Alumni Award.” Beaulieu holds a PhD in Creative Writing from Roehampton University, has served as poet laureate of both Calgary and Banff, and is the Director of Literary Arts at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity.
Endorsements
Marjorie Perloff
author of Infra-thin: An Experiment in Micropoetics and Unoriginal Genius: Poetry by Other Means in the New Century
The detritus of signage is all around us. The poems in Derek Beaulieu’s riveting new collection begin by resembling the signs, logos & slogans of everyday life—and then become more & more unreadable. No two of these constellations are alike; each promises something it cannot quite fulfill, as readability, having failed, gives way to lookability. So suggestive are these images that we cannot stop looking, trying to decipher, to arrest the flow. Kern presents moments of poetic nostalgia for the signposts of a past that never fully existed.
Johanna Drucker
author of Inventing the Alphabet: The Origins of Letters from Antiquity to the Present and Diagrammatic Writing
Do letters have lives? We have to wonder, seduced as we are by the antics of these characters. The tradition of taking alphabetic forms & making them into suggestive glyphs has a complex history in the signs of masons, brands, trademarks, monograms & graphical poetics. In Beaulieu’s Kern the principle of enjambment is put to poetic purpose. Kern is a living demonstration that poetry is about unleashing the potential of combinatoric protocols to drive the performative art of letters on a page.
Reviews
[REVIEW] Kern, by derek beaulieu(opens in new tab)
Klara du Plessis
Review Short: Derek Beaulieu’s Kern(opens in new tab)
Caren Florance
Usage metrics
Funding
- punctum books(opens in new tab)
Program: Special Collections
Genres
- Fabulations
Keywords
- advertising
- asemic writing
- dry-transfer lettering
- graphic art
- language art
- signage
- visual poetry
