|
What shall we do with these questions, questions?
The questions are there but not the answers.
Sometimes it seems as if there
are some answers,
But you come up closer and they turn out to be, after all,
questions.
Twelve unhappy love poems by America’s best-loved unhappy
love poet! These pieces about the heartbreak of Morris
Imposternak, a competitor of DJ Spinoza, ask how one is to feel
real emotion in a world where all objects are interchangeable,
and how one is to express such emotion in a world that precludes
the possibility of true statement.
Eugene Ostashevsky is a Russian-born American
poet from New York City. His poetry collection, Iterature,
displays the dissonant rhythms, heavy unexpected
rhymes and multilingual puns that occupied
him at the turn of the century, as well as a healthy interest
in mathematics. His more recent work, the forthcoming Life
and Opinions of DJ Spinoza, employs characters such as MC Squared,
Peepeesaurus, the Begriffon and, of course, DJ Spinoza, to explore
the shortcomings of axiomatic systems with the insouciance and
energy of Saturday-morning cartoons. He has edited an English-language
anthology of Russian absurdist writings of the 1930s by such
authors as Alexander Vvedensky and Daniil Kharms. His PhD dissertation
was on the history of zero. He teaches the humanities at New
York University.
_______
|