Gjertrud schnackenberg biography of martinez and associates
Gjertrud Schnackenberg (/ ˈjɛərtruːd ˈʃnækənbɜːrɡ /; born August 27, , in Tacoma, Washington) is an American poet.
Nationality: American. Born: Tacoma, Washington, 27 August Family: Married Robert Nozick in Career: Visiting fellow, St. Portraits and Elegies. In the mids a new American formalism was signaled and discussed. By Alan Shapiro was able to declare in Critical Inquiry, "Open the pages of almost any national journal or magazine, and where, ten years ago, one found only one or another kind of free verse lyric one now finds well-rhymed quatrains, sestinas, villanelles, sonnets and blank verse dramatic monologues or meditations.
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In any event, the American renaissance in formal strategies led to poems being published that were neither better nor worse than most verse available at any time. For most poetry published is, alas, tedious and unlit. But some of the poets associated with the New Formalism demand serious attention, not least Gjertrud Schnackenberg, who has used meter and rhyme without subduing emotional currents.
She has, to adapt a phrase of Richard Wilbur , employed her cadences and rhyme not as ornament but as emphasis. Her first book, Portraits and Elegies —well named, for that is what the poems in it exactly are—was published in Her elegies, though corseted, are full of feeling. Through the telling of anecdotes they conjure up a once-loving father-daughter relationship.
The touching memories of her father are a form of celebration as well as a requiem. In twelve separate poems she celebrates her father's piano playing; his ability to extract a significant lesson from some mundane incident, such as a bird dropping excreta on his head; his courteous behavior during a brush with a bow-tied English cyclist at Cambridge; father-and-daughter trips that involve night fishing and visits as tourists to Norway, Rome, and Germany.
The total effect of these dozen beautifully composed elegies is to hear the speaking voice of a young woman in controlled mourning, rather than one displaying a "grief approaching lunacy.