Francesco
Levato (USA)
1968His first collection of poetry, Marginal State (Fractal Edge Press, 2006), was written while living in the Apennine Mountains of Central Italy, in a house once occupied by Spanish mercenaries during the fourteenth century. His book length documentary poem, War Rug (Plastique Press, 2009), was adapted into a poetry film that went on to win Official Selections from the Zebra Poetry Film Festival in Berlin, Germany, and the Potenza International Film Festival, in Potenza, Italy, and was featured at Anthology Film Archives in New York. His first book of translations of Italian poet Tiziano Fratus’ Creaturing was published by Marick Press in 2010, as was his own collection of documentary poems, Elegy for Dead Languages. Variations on Want, a poetry film based on his long poetic sequence of the same name was premiered at the Henry Miller Library, in Big Sur, California, in a collaborative performance with composer Philip Glass in 2011, and his e-book, Endless, Beautiful, Exact was published by Argotist e-books in 2011.
About Levato’s Work:
“Levato
is himself an avant-garde poet whose work draws on cinematic and documentary
techniques—in his own words, “engages subject matter through disruption of
content and form, fragmentation of narrative and radical juxtaposition of
visual and textual elements.” His poems, truly products of postmodern culture,
sample: they collect, cut and redistribute pieces of other poems into new
configurations. One long work, “Aura,” makes a fragmented, haunting dialogue of
pieces of Robert Browning’s and Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s poems. A
significant part of Levato’s work is something called cinépoetry, a kind of
collaged videographic poetry that does with footage what his other work does
with language. Levato also translates, a kind of work vitally connected to his
poetic work, which involves so much transformation of extant materials into new
forms.”—Alli Carlisle, Outsider Institution: the Avant-Garde Pedagogy of the
Chicago School of Poetics
“Francesco
Levato’s powerful documentary, War Rug—like Eliot Weinberger’s What I heard
about Iraq before it—detains the language of the perpetrators of global
military aggression and redeploys it to indict them. From J.C. Penny catalog
copy to counterintelligence manuals and autopsy reports, War Rug is a fierce
yet unfortunate reminder of the absolute horrors of our age.”—Mark Nowak,
author of Coal Mountain Elementary
“Levato's
Elegy for Dead Languages, while a more baroque and sculpted collection, is also
a powerful testament to modernity. Levato traces the blindspots of war,
particularly controversial American interventions in the Middle East. Elegy for
Dead Languages is an imagistic tour de force, and Levato's unsparing lens is
just the sort these subjects deserve and require. The collection's poems seem
unduly cerebral only if we forget -- as we must never forget -- that these are
real appendages being torn apart, real pieties being eviscerated, real
landscapes being ravaged. Brian Turner has already given us a view of war from
the front lines; Levato's perspective is a more distant but also (perhaps in
consequence of its distance) an even more comprehensive one. It is right that
we should again be troubled by poetry; and it is right that when poetry
troubles us it should move us not merely to emotion but to action. Levato's
book meets the high standards not only of testament but also -- albeit in the
sociopolitical, rather than militaristic sense -- a call-to-arms. The horrors
of war are too easily rendered as Kantian sublimities for which the stateside
mind can find no objective correlative; Levato suffuses us, instead, in the
facts, figures, and bureaucratic speech out of which real-time horrors are in
actuality composed. A necessary and suitably unforgiving book.”—Seth Abramson, Huffington Post
BOOKS
OF POETRY
Endless, Beautiful,
Exact (Liverpool,
United Kingdom: Argotist, 2011); Elegy
for Dead Languages (Grosse Point Farms, Michigan: Marick Press, 2010); War Rug, a book length documentary poem
(Chicago: Plastique Press, 2009); Marginal
State (Chicago: Fractal Edge Press, 2006).
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