Assistant Professor Jennifer Firestone’s new publication is out! In Gates & Fields, Jennifer Firestone conjures Emily Dickinson to serve as the Virgil of this brave... Read More
While many Literary Studies classes for the fall semester are fully enrolled, there are some exciting classes that still have availability. Here are some... Read More
The Literary Studies department is proud to announce the inaugural Robin Mookerjee award, which will honor a student whose creativity and passion for literature have some... Read More
Literary Studies is thrilled to announce that poet Simone White, a Visiting Assistant Professor of Literary Studies, and novelist Kaitlyn Greenidge, who will be joining... Read More
Composed between 2009-2012, Thom Donovan’s Withdrawn engages a social and political landscape through a densely speculative and intertextual lyricism. Proceeding through dedication and interlocution, the poems are... Read More
Save the date for Eugene Lang College’s 2nd annual Dean’s Honor Symposium! It will be held on Monday, April 24 from 2-5 p.m at... Read More
Juliana Broad is a New School writing student who wrote the following article for Literary Hub as a result of her work in Professor Berman’s Victorian Literature... Read More
November 15, 2016 Last week’s election of Donald J. Trump to the Presidency of the United States came not only as a shock to... Read More
Assistant Professor Jennifer Firestone’s new publication is out!
In Gates & Fields, Jennifer Firestone conjures Emily Dickinson to serve as the Virgil of this brave lyric sequence, guiding the poems through the fierce silences at the heart of grief. Firestone is a poet who feels her way forward, and her spare language and intense images cast a vital, vitalizing light across the landscape of loss.
—Susan Howe
Wondrously strange, eerily healing, like an overheard incantation, these clipped lyrics build sound relationships and repetitions into a conversation among the elements—one that makes them somehow even more elemental, even more essential. Firestone weaves a beautifully haunted atmosphere, enthralling and captivating. We are there with her in the carriage—toward eternity.
—Cole Swensen
Reading these spare poems makes me feel like I am participating in them, overhearing them, such is their suggestiveness and the intimacy of their utterances.
—Kazim Ali
What holds us in is often not what we imagine. Jennifer Firestone knows it better than any of us and her new book is a template of the heavenly earth. Many thanks for this book’s dreamy sluice into another version of our world. If poets can reignite lost eyes on the path, Firestone is our champion. A poet we need, a poet who can show the poet in all who imagine and read.
—CA Conrad
Firestone’s quiescent elegy is set in another time. Time of death, time of memory, a time of pellucid borderline consciousness. Do we wake or sleep? Poignant, fragile subtleties of existence collect here—particulars transcend and magnify, as in “Guilt and other small planets colliding.” The quiet power of Gates & Fields grows on you, over you.
—Anne Waldman