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FRED MOTEN is a professor of English at the University of California, Riverside. He is the author of Arkansas, Poems (with Jim Behrle), I ran from it but was still in it, Hughson s Tavern, B Jenkins, The Feel Trio, and the critical works In the Break: The Aesthetics of the Black Radical Tradition and The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study (with Stefano Harney).
"In [Moten's poetry], he gathers the sources running through his
head and transforms them into something musical, driven by the
material of language itself. The poem 'all topological last friday
evening, ' collected in Moten's 2015 book, The Little Edges, ...
unfolds as a chain of references, from free-jazz saxophonist Albert
Ayler to Andrew Marvell. We may not know exactly how we moved from
one to the other, but there's pleasure in getting lost in the
dance."--David Wallace, The New Yorker
"With its jazz exuberance, the book has the maverick spirit of one
of its heroes, the multi-media artist Ralph Lemon: no hierarchy, no
fluidity, no care-ridden pursuit of time, just bold, wild,
delirious genius Moten is intent above all on not being anybody's
'Project.' Anarchronistically whimsical and erotic, his writing
consolidates the spirit of jazz well beyond the aim and resources
of a Langston Hughes or even an Amiri Baraka. But like Baraka he's
a teacher; he instructs as well as delights."--Calvin Bedient, Lana
Turner Journal
"Moten experiments in 'shaped prose' arranging words in rhythmic
blocks, shards and in audio-visual patterns."--Molly McArdle,
Library Journal
"Skins and minds are among the central concerns of the voices of
The Little Edges. Their chunks and fragments mostly focus on
listening, though, as a way of getting beneath skins and minds and
beyond the rhetoric about them."--T.C. Marshall, American Book
Review
"Through the interplay of enjambment and parenthesis, the poem
pushes us to ponder the appositional relation between making,
doing, and having The Little Edges expands Moten's concern for
poetry's worlding capacities by placing the reader in the liminal
spaces of language and meaning, in the marginal positions suggested
by the collection's title."--Gerónimo Sarmiento Cruz, Chicago
Review
"In its extravagance, Africa-American music can elicit a heightened
kinship with its listeners, by turns sensuous or politicized
(sometimes both at once) and suffused with pleasure, joy, deep
feeling, resistance. Moten aims to do likewise, using mere words,
their sounds, and the visual rhythms of the black-and-white
page."--James Gibbons, Hyperallergic
"Moten pays homage to jazz history, poetry history, and the
illimitable future of the imagination in works organized less
autonomous poems than in page-length lines, blocks of text, and
short riffs."--Publishers Weekly
"Moten's work is free speech in the best sense--musical but with
heft--and will appeal to those who prefer their poetry to be
'beyond category'."--Chris Pusateri, Library Journal
"Sometimes Moten is riding a wave of sound It's like you're walking
by a practice room and someone is improvising on the saxophone,
lost to the music, and it's so clear and haunting and beautiful,
you can't not stop and listen."--Joy Katz, American Poetry
Review
"In [Moten's poetry], he gathers the sources running through his
head and transforms them into something musical, driven by the
material of language itself. The poem 'all topological last friday
evening, ' collected in Moten's 2015 book, The Little Edges,
unfolds as a chain of references, from free-jazz saxophonist Albert
Ayler to Andrew Marvell. We may not know exactly how we moved from
one to the other, but there's pleasure in getting lost in the
dance."--David Wallace, The New Yorker
"In many ways, Fred Moten's work is devoted to fugitivity. The
stance of his poems is grassroots revolutionary: undoing by means
of the everyday, the super-powerful default settings of a
corporatized world and thereby reopening the case for what the
world of poetry might look and feel like."--Elizabeth Willis,
Boston Review
"The poetic vision, or sound, of The Little Edges is remarkable in
its range of reference, deep music, surprise at every turn,
softness of lyric address coupled with political meditation, and
undeniable beauty."--Maggie Nelson, author of Bluets and The Art of
Cruelty: A Reckoning
"The poems in The Little Edges work the margins of language--the
African American vernacular with its powerfully kinetic resources
as well as the more elevated and elegant language of the
academy--blending and juxtaposing them in ways that result in an
utterly fresh poetic idiom.""--M. NourbeSe Philip, author of
Zong!
"The poetic vision, or sound, of The Little Edges is remarkable in
its range of reference, deep music, surprise at every turn,
softness of lyric address coupled with political meditation, and
undeniable beauty."--Maggie Nelson, author of Bluets and The Art of
Cruelty: A Reckoning
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