Saturday, May 1, 2010

A New Book by Peter Lamborn Wilson

Peter Lamborn Wilson knows Henry Corbin's work from the inside out.  (See his wikipedia entry - especially for the bibliography which has a fair number of entries of considerable interest). Don't miss his reviews of Corbin's  Man of Light and Temple and Contemplation. This new book, which I have not (yet) seen, seems worthy of note. (I would point readers to certain pages in David Abram's The Spell of the Sensuous, and also to some of Hamaan's writing for context).

Abecedarium - Alphapoetic meditation on the etymology of the English alphabet with diagrams by the author.


Peter Lamborn Wilson’s quick wit and poetic intelligence add immeasurably to the small store of recent art and poetry (Mac Low, Berman, Silliman, Bok, Johns, to name a few) celebrating or utilitizng the lore and wonder of alphabetic writing. As with Mac Low and Berman in particular, Wilson’s focus is on the Hebrew alphabet, coterminous with the Phoenician at the alphabet’s beginnings: a meditation, visual and verbal, on the shape, form, history, and praxis of the letters and signs in question. The resultant Abecedarium, reads like poetry or what we now take poetry to be: short and tight prose versets that bring to life a world of lore and tradition, and by so doing, make it new. A book to read again and again, and a lettristic delight.
—Jerome Rothenberg

Abecedarium by Peter Lamborn WilsonThis remarkable lexicon explores tensions between life in a world before the State and the emergence of the alphabet, or the origin of the world as we purport to know it. Amidst the reign and terror of nonsense, in a land where ‘everything is believable and nothing knowable,’ Peter Lamborn Wilson—at the peak of his extraordinary power—tutors us in the old ways in an offering of both knowledge and wisdom.
—Ammiel Alcalay

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