Page proofs for my Liverpool book, The Twilight of the Avant-Garde:  Spanish Poetry 1980-2000.   This is the first time the book seems real to me, that it will actually appear. 
These are my acknowledgments:  
Chapter 1 appeared in Hispanic Review (1999) under the title “The Avant-Garde 
and its Discontents: Aesthetic Conservatism in Recent Spanish Poetry.” I am 
grateful to Ignacio-Javier López for this accepting this article, and to Guillermo 
Carnero for circulating it among writers in Spain. Chapter 2 was published in 
Contemporary Spanish Poetry: The Word and the World, edited by Cecile West-Settle 
and Sylvia Sherno. Chapter 3 appeared in Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies. Elena 
Delgado, Jo Labanyi, and an anonymous reviewer were helpful in improving 
this piece. Chapter 5 appeared in a special issue Diacritics edited by José María 
Rodríguez-García. Without the help and encouragement of José María and an 
anonymous reviewer for Diacritics, this chapter would have been much weaker. 
Claudio Rodríguez-Fer was also helpful to me in giving me background on 
Valente’s acquaintance with Celan and Heidegger. Chapter 7 first appeared in 
Revista de Estudios Hispánicos. I would like to acknowledge Michael Mudrovic and 
Randolph Pope for accepting this article, and Akiko Tsuchiya for permission to 
reprint it here. Randolph also accepted other articles of mine on related topics 
that did not make it into this book. His generous support of my work over the 
years is greatly appreciated. 
The research for this book was supported, over the years, by the Univer- 
sity of Kansas General Research Fund, the Hall Center for the Humanities, the 
Cramer family, the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of 
Kansas, and the Grant for Cultural Co-operation between U.S. Universities and 
the Spanish Ministry of Culture. Without the generous support of these institu- 
tions, this book could not have been written. 
I owe a debt of gratitude to numerous individuals who have discussed 
contemporary Spanish poetry with me, or lent their moral and material 
support to me at various points along the way. This list includes Akiko Tsuchiya, 
Marjorie Perloff, David Shapiro, Elena Delgado, Silvia Bermúdez, Amalia Iglesias, 
Lola Velasco, Concha García, Ana Rossetti, Isla Correyero, César Antonio Molina, 
Juan Barja, Guillermo Carnero, Jesús Munárriz, Juan Carlos Mestre, Antonio 
Méndez Rubio, Jorge Riechmann, Steve Summerhill, José Manuel Cuesta Abad, Antonio Gamoneda, Jaime Siles, Laura Scarano, Elena Delgado, Germán Gullón, 
Chris Soufas, Margo Persin, John Kronik, John Wilcox, and, last but certainly not 
least, the late Andy Debicki. My past and present colleagues at the University of 
Kansas and the Ohio State University—too numerous to list here—have also 
been helpful and encouraging. 
The participants in the Poetics Seminar at the Hall Center for the Humani- 
ties have also been crucial to my ability to maintain a high level of intellectual 
stimulation. Thanks is due to Roberta Johnson and Victor Bailey (past and 
present Directors of the Hall Center respectively), for their on-going support of 
the Seminar (and of my own research). Ken Irby, Judy Roitman, Stan Lombardo, 
Van Kelly, Jill Kuhnheim, and Joe Harrington have been the most assiduous 
participants in the Seminar. My hunger for constant intellectual dialogue has 
also been fed on a daily basis by an informal network of “Poetry and Poetics 
Bloggers”: Jordan Davis, Heriberto Yépez, K. Silem Mohammad, Ron Silliman, 
Gary Sullivan, Nada Gordon, Jim Behrle, Tim Yu, Josh Corey, Stephanie Young, 
Henry Gould, Nick Piombino, and about a dozen others. 
Various audiences who listened to oral versions of the material presented at 
several conferences also gave me valuable comments that helped me to clarify 
my ideas. Also, the students in several Graduate Seminars helped me to remain 
engaged with this material. Leslie Bayers wrote a paper on Concha García for 
one of these seminars that stimulated me to develop my ideas on this poet. 
This book would not have existed without Luis García Montero. Although 
I doubt he will welcome a book that calls his aesthetic values into question, 
I must admit that his energy in pursuing his vision of poetry has shaped the 
recent history of Spanish poetry. If I had not read his eloquent essays outlining 
the ideological basis for the “poetry of experience,” I would never had begun 
this project. 
Needless to say, none of the individuals or institutions listed above, least of 
all Luis García Montero, is responsible for any error of fact or judgment in this 
book. In fact, I have ignored a great deal of excellent advice.
Two Elena Delgados (possibly others?).
ResponderEliminarElena did more than one thing for me. She belong on the general list as well as being acknowledged for help on one particular article. Call me redundant.
ResponderEliminarOh! Nice! Thank you for the thank you! And congratulations!
ResponderEliminar