American poet
David Melnick (1938–2022[ 1] ) was a gay avant-garde American poet .[ 2] He was born in Illinois and grew up in Los Angeles, California.[ 2] He attended the University of Chicago and University of California, Berkeley.
Book One of Melnick's homophonic translation of Homer's Iliad , titled Men in Aïda , was published in 1983 by Lyn Hejinian's Tuumba Press. The farcical bathhouse scenario presented in Melnick's translation suggests underlying homoeroticism in the original text.[ 3] Melnick's work has been included in Ron Silliman's 1986 anthology of Language poetry In the American Tree . Craig Dworkin and Kenneth Goldsmith wrote about Melnick's Men in Aïda in relation to conceptual poetics in 2010's Against Expression: An Anthology of Conceptual Writing . Often grouped with Language poetry , Melnick's Men in Aïda has been compared to Celia and Louis Zukofsky's Catullus [ 4] and PCOET has been discussed alongside Russian Futurist Velimir Khlebnikov's zaum poetics.[ 5]
Bibliography
Eclogs , Ithaca House, 1972
"The ‘Ought’ of Seeing: Zukofsky’s Bottom" in Maps . John Taggart, ed. 1973.[ 6]
PCOET , San Francisco: G.A.W.K., 1975
Men in Aïda , Book One , Berkeley: Tuumba Press, 1983
A Pin's Fee, 1988
Men in Aïda , The Hague & Tirana: Uitgeverij. 2015. ISBN 9789491914041 . This edition collects three books of Men in Aïda in a single volume.
References
^ "Obituary: David Melnick" . SFGate. San Francisco Chronicle. 1 March 2022. Retrieved 1 March 2022 .
^ a b Silliman, Ronald. In the American Tree. Orono: National Poetry Foundation, 1986. 602.
^ Perelman, Bob. The marginalization of poetry: language writing and literary history (book). Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-691-02138-6 . OCLC 185423402 . Retrieved 24 December 2009.
^ Dworkin, Craig Douglas, and Kenneth Goldsmith. Against Expression: an Anthology of Conceptual Writing . Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 2011. 418.
^ Lutzkanova-Vassileva, Albena. The Testimonies of Russian and American Postmodern Poetry: Reference, Trauma, and History . New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2015. 175-181.
^ Mark Scroggins. "David Melnick: PCOET" Culture Industry. 20 April, 2005.
External links