Breath Poetics
Panel for the next American Comparative Literature Association (ACLA) annual meeting (Virtual, May 29 – June 1, 2025)
Organizers: Mae Losasso (University of Warwick) and Lucy Alford (Wake Forest University)
Deadline for proposing a paper: October 14, 2024
To propose a paper, please visit the ACLA website: https://www.acla.org/annual-meeting.
There is a long history across traditions linking rhythms of breath to poetic formation, inspiration, invocation, and voice. More recently, the term ‘breath poetics’ has come to refer to a particular moment in mid C20th America, associated with Black Mountain and Beat writers. For the New American Poets of the 1950s and 60s, poetic breath signaled jazz-inflected spontaneity, an often masculine vigor, and the vital signature of authorial presence. “Breath,” as Nathaniel Mackey writes in ‘Breath and Precarity’ (2018), “was in the air.”
Mackey’s essay marks a shift in contemporary thinking around breath and poetics. His turn toward breath as a precarious trope in the work of black poets and musicians is symptomatic of a broader cultural turn toward breathlessness and its discontents, revealing the breathless modalities – social as well as environmental – that characterize our global moment, from Covid-19 to the Black Lives Matter movement, ecological crisis, air pollution, rising cases of respiratory disease linked to resource extraction labor, and the expanded use of biochemical warfare. As Franco ‘Bifo’ Berardi (2018) observes, there are signs of “physical and psychological breathlessness everywhere, in the megacities choked by pollution, in the precarious social condition of the majority of exploited workers, in the pervading fear of violence, war, and aggression.”
This seminar aims to expand critical conversations around breath and poetry to situate contemporary inflections of breath poetics within wider comparative and transhistorical discourses. We seek papers that present alternative trajectories to the canonical narrative of postwar breath poetics, shifting theoretical ground by engaging critically with the formal, thematic, and cultural valences of breath and breathlessness. Key questions that this seminar hopes to address are:
Topics may include:
This seminar welcomes scholars working across languages, geographies, and theoretical frameworks, and encourages proposals that take cross-disciplinary and/or transhistorical approaches. Please submit abstracts (300-400 words) and a short bio by October 14.