Conductors of Chaos: A Poetry Anthology is a poetry anthology edited by Iain Sinclair, and published in the United Kingdom in 1996 by Picador.[1]
Sinclair in the Introduction wrote that "The secret history of ... 'the British Poetry Revival' ... is as arcane a field of study as the heresies and schisms of the early Church."
The selection includes both a number of 'Revival' poets, and a few figures chosen as 'precursors', with some deliberate scheme of comment on the contemporary as well as the retrospection involving the 1960s and 1970s.
Poets in Conductors of Chaos: A Poetry Anthology
- Caroline Bergvall
- Brian Catling
- cris cheek
- Kelvin Corcoran
- Andrew Crozier
- J. F. Hendry
- Andrew Duncan
- Allen Fisher
- Bill Griffiths
- Alan Halsey
- Lee Harwood
- Michael Haslam
- Stewart Home
- John James
- Grace Lake
- Tony Lopez
- W. S. Graham
- Barry MacSweeney
- Rod Mengham
- Drew Milne
- David Jones
- Geraldine Monk
- Douglas Oliver
- Maggie O'Sullivan - Out to Lunch (Ben Watson) - Ian Patterson
- J. H. Prynne
- Jeremy Reed
- David Gascoyne
- Denise Riley
- Peter Riley
- Nicholas Moore
- Stephen Rodefer
- Chris Torrance
- John Wilkinson
- Aaron Williamson
See also
References
- ↑ Sinclair, Iain, ed. (1996). Conductors of chaos. London: Picador. ISBN 0330331353. OCLC 37499968.
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