Saturday, April 20, 2013

Poetical punctuation …

… James Agee’s Unconventional Use of Colons, by Anna Maria Johnson — Numéro Cinq. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

1 comment:

  1. D. Keith Mano on Hugh Kenner:

    "Styles are elected," he says. Kenner's
    own style is elected, invented,
    compounded, found. As much made to
    the purpose as an oyster knife. The
    colon epitomizes it. I, who live or die
    by the colon, who have been publicly
    reprimanded for my colons in a magazine
    of several million readers. I
    would never dare use, until my first
    paragraph above, two in one sentence.
    Kenner will use four at a time; sentences
    that look like railroad flats. It's
    an equal sign, shorthand for "like" or
    "as." The colon marks a style that can
    encompass "head or tail" and "lucubrations"
    in the same phrase. A style
    that marries sophisticated constructions
    with the elbow-nudge fragment.
    All spoken in an unannounced second
    person, to you, familiarly. Colloquial,
    classical; magisterial, intimate; pointed,
    fun: a new thing in criticism.


    From: "Kenner's Code," D. Keith Mano, National Review, 5/23/1975, Vol. 27 Issue 19, p568-569. A review of the book A Homemade World: The American Modernist Writers by Hugh Kenner.


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