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Awards and honors

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I want to discuss the "Awards and honors" section, added by GeogSage, removed by notwally, and re-added by myself. A devoted issue of a well-established and probably notable poetry magazine probably tends to pass WP:NPROF C1.c. (I do not think that the publication is vanity, fringe, or non-selective in this sense.) The top later career award [1] of a well-established (founded 1960) mid-sized academic society probably tends to pass NPROF C2.e. Note that the American Comparative Literature Association does not have an article, but I suspect it to be notable (for a start, [2] appears to be substantial coverage). I think that anything that is a probably pass of a notability criterion is probably worth briefly including in an article. In my experience, this inclusion fits with our typical practices in well-formed academic articles. (On the other hand, grants, early career awards, and various other WP:MILL awards should generally stay out.) notwally is concerned about whether it is WP:DUE to include either of these honors; I understand them to be a little more concerned about the ACLA prize. Input from other editors, including _brief_ input from COI ones, would be welcome. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 10:42, 30 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The content of the section was removed by another editor in a previous edit, along with some other stuff I did not include. I saw that particular content as salvageable in my opinion and created the section "Awards and honors" to house it. Therefore, I agree the special issue should be included. As the content had already been removed once, but some of the restored content was left, I didn't push the issue. I still support including it. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 16:57, 30 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
We have articles about professors who have made an impact in their field, as described by WP:PROF. Since the book made enough of an impact to receive an award by a scholarly society focused on a particular subfield of literature, it is not undue to include it. Certainly professor's articles often suffer from the addition of every award however minor, but this is not the case here. Given the lack of a list of awards, it would be better to include the sentence in the prose. The rewrite mentions the book in prose; include the prize there. Leaving it out would be strange. StarryGrandma (talk) 23:58, 30 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Two updates on the Wellek prize: 1) I added an announcement of the prize in a well-established (though affiliated with ACLA) journal, this also has more depth. 2) The National Research Council includes it in their list of highly prestigious awards, see pdf linked from [3]. I don't think it is good style to cite the NRC list in the article, but perhaps it will address notwally's WP:DUE concerns. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 09:06, 1 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@Russ Woodroofe, the source for the prize does not have to be independent of the awarding organization. We believe organizations when they say they give prizes. As WP:PROF says: For documenting that a person has won a specific award (but not for a judgement of whether or not that award is prestigious), publications of the awarding institution are considered a reliable source. Most readers, including me, don't have access to jstor - it was nice to have a link to the citation. Is the citation in the Comparative Literature announcement? StarryGrandma (talk) 17:13, 1 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
StarryGrandma, I know WP:NPROF well, but would also like to address concerns of other editors who were thinking that this might be too promotional or otherwise undue. Anyway, I restored the web source per your request, but left in the journal citation, which I think might be the canonical one in some sense. There is a little more detail on the webpage, OTOH. It is possible that there is a good way to combine the two, but I don't immediately see it. I think we could remove the "better source" tag: the NRC "highly prestigious" business I think tends to settle that the ACLA is likely notable, and the award is due. Out of a sense of restraint, I will leave it for someone else remove that tag. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 17:45, 1 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Agreed. Tag removed unless there is more discussion on the matter. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 19:12, 2 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]
StarryGrandma, I just wanted to note that whether something is WP:NOTEWORTHY or significant enough to include in an article is not the same as WP:NOTABILITY or WP:NPROF. While "the source for the prize does not have to be independent of the awarding organization" for notability purposes, that is not accurate for WP:DUE. Whether to include something in an article is more than just whether the content is true (see WP:VNOT). To be due, both reliability and independence are relevant, and the best sources under policy are "reliable, independent, published sources with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy". I think the essay WP:INDY probably summarizes it better than I could: "For the sake of neutrality, Wikipedia cannot rely upon any editor's opinion about what topics are important. Everything in Wikipedia must be verified in reliable sources, including statements about what subjects are important and why. To verify that a subject is important, only a source that is independent of the subject can provide a reliable evaluation." If the award is notable but simply hasn't had an article created on it yet, then I don't think pushing for independent citations is as important, and I appreciate Russ Woodroofe making that argument here and providing some sources to support that position. – notwally (talk) 06:02, 9 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Notwally, I have been editing here for a while, but have only recently run into the notion that every fact about a person in an article must be important or noteworthy enough to be in an article as shown by a source saying it is important. Can you point me to the policy that states this? WP:DUE is part of WP:NPOV, and is dealing specifically with taking a neutral point of view and balancing sides when representing viewpoints. Not the case here. WP:VNOT says nothing about independent sources for importance or noteworthiness, only that Consensus may determine that certain information does not improve an article, and other policies may indicate that the material is inappropriate. The sentence you quote from the explanatory essay on independent sources is the section explaining why independent sources are needed for a subject in order to have an article about that subject, not about article content. It is followed by the section that starts out Non-independent sources may be used to source content for articles, but the connection of the source to the topic must be clearly identified. I agree that there must be independent sources for a topic to be the subject of an article rather than having editors decide without them, but once that is shown, the content itself can be and historically has been determined by consensus among editors.
I have been keeping an eye on a couple of professors' articles as their admirers add awards and would like more ammunition to go in and do a trim. I wish it were as easy as that, but I don't think your argument is right. I am going have to make an argument like "this professor has important awards, don't bury them in a list of minor ones." StarryGrandma (talk) 00:48, 10 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
StarryGrandma, I already quoted the policy from WP:NPOV, from its "What to include and exclude" section, above: "In principle, all articles should be based on reliable, independent, published sources with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy." I am not aware of anyone ever saying that "every fact about a person in an article must be important or noteworthy enough to be in an article as shown by a source saying it is important". The INDY essay I quoted said that independent sourcess are the only way to verify a subject is important. How else do you suggest to verify importance? Of course, certain material, like where a person was born, generally doesn't need any verification of its importance. Obviously, something like an award is not the same as a birth place, and determining whether that is WP:DUE needs to be based on policy, sources, and reasons, not merely the personal opinions of editors. Further, neither INDY nor its section "Why independent sources are required" that you linked above are only about whether to have an article; both are clearly about content in articles as well.
Similarly, WP:RS states regarding self-published sources in WP:RSSELF: "Self-published expert sources may be considered reliable when produced by an established expert on the subject matter, whose work in the relevant field has previously been published by reliable, independent publications." The same concept is found even in WP:NPROF that you quotes, which says that "judgement of whether or not that award is prestigious" cannot be based on publications of the awarding institution. The same goes for awards and other similar content in articles--determining whether something is important enough to include needs to be based on more than just editorial opinion. As WP:DUE also states: "Keep in mind that, in determining proper weight, we consider a viewpoint's prevalence in reliable sources, not its prevalence among Wikipedia editors or the general public." Unless you are claiming that the personal opinion of editors can be the sole justification for determining whether or not an award is prestigious or content is important enough to include, I'm not really sure what point you are trying to make. At this point, though, I think this is veering too far into wikilawyering anyways, and so this is probably the last response I will provide here. – notwally (talk) 01:49, 10 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Contentious topics notice

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Could a passing administrator or other experienced person comment on whether the recent removal of the Contentious Topics tag by Christian Roess is correct? The tag was placed by now-deceased administrator Slim Virgin in 2019, under the procedures in place then. While BLPs always have additional protections, the CT tag tends to indicate that one should for example use more restraint in reverting. I started to revert the removal, but then realized that I am not actually sure what the rules and good taste dictate here. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 19:58, 14 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@Russ Woodroofe, in 2022 Cewbot changed the biography header for this talk page from this to this by adding the banner shell. The banner shell has its own warning about living people, so we now had two warnings. I think the one warning is sufficient. StarryGrandma (talk) 02:35, 15 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you Starry Grandma. I originated the Barrett Watten Wikipedia page almost 19 years ago. It was a straightforward BLP then, and it continues to be so today. The insistence that a BPLN, a noticeboard issuance has to be adhered to, belies the fact that Carla Harryman is an integral figure in the trajectory of both of their intimate and unwavering formation of the so-called West Coast Language Poets group. Just off the top of my head, are we supposed to delete from the lede section of the Frida Kahlo page that Diego Rivera was her spouse? Of course not. BPLN is a guideline and not a leash. I will be restoring Carla Harryman to the lede section of the Barrett Watten page with the relevant sourcing for this action provided throughout the article. Thank you. Christian Roess (talk) 14:36, 15 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Although you may have started the article, you do not WP:OWN it. Kahlo and Rivera is a different situation -- Kahlo was overshadowed by Rivera during their lifetimes, the reverse has happened since, and this has been covered extensively in reliable sources. Where are the reliable sources for the importance of the notable spouse to the extent that the spouse should be in the lede?? That Harryman is his spouse should _certainly_ be in the article, and currently is not other than in the infobox. Perhaps it would be most appropriate to add a sentence under major work, where she is mentioned? Or a personal life section, which I agree should make clear that she is herself notable. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 19:03, 15 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I was addressing Starry Grandma. Starry Grandma comes across as fairly reasonable. And encourages an open discussion. I’ll assume you are addressing me, though you did not use my name. Let me say that my point is that there is no hard and fast rule re: whether the spouse should or should not be in the lede. I’m not comparing apples to oranges. I also already did mention that the sourcing and references would be provided to justify including Carla Harryman in the lede (again, btw, the references were there in places, but they’ve been ransacked, so I have to reinvent the wheel, so to speak). Who said that I thought I was acting like I owned this Wikipedia article? Where did you pull that from? You’re creating straw man arguments here to misrepresent my position in order to justify these attacks on me. That’s what it sure comes across as: an attack. Christian Roess (talk) 00:10, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Christian Roess, I am glad to hear that "I originated the (page)" was not a claim of ownership. Are you professionally connected with Watten? I have no remaining concerns about BLP vs CT tags; I was hesitant to remove tags that an administrator has added as an admin action. I will move the spouse-in-lede discussion to a more representative heading. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 10:49, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for addressing me by name Russ Woodroofe. Your tone has changed, and now maybe there is a chance for civil discussion and a chance to make real improvements to the Barrett Watten page. I have no professional ties to Barrett Watten. I’m curious as to why you ask. Your question strikes me as quite odd. If you must know, I have a degree in English (1989). Since then, I’ve not stepped foot in a university, except for a few workshops. Never met Barrett Watten. Right now, I work in maintenance at Costco, primarily keeping the bakery clean. Do I need to have a professional relationship with Watten? Do I need to be in academia in order to edit his page? Do I need to have a professional relationship to Watten or be in academia in order to read poetry properly? Or to find questions of poetics and poetry vital and sustaining? Your question Russ Woodroofe is odd and out-of-place. Can we use this time, instead, to improve this BLP? please. I don’t have the time for this really. And believe me, my wife gets mad when I’m on Wikipedia! Seriously. Christian Roess (talk) 13:14, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I ask about professional ties because of our WP:COI policies. There has been a lot of COI editing to this article in the past, including an insistence that Harryman should be in the lede. You certainly do not need to be a professor to edit Wikipedia! A groups of several editors (particularly GeogSage and notwally, also Morbidthoughts) reworked the article extensively a month or two ago. I see that GeogSage invited you at the time on your talk page to take part in the discussion. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 09:38, 17 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

WP:COI is not just about professional ties. Christian Roess, do you have any external relationship with Barrett Watten, including as friends, family, or another relationship? – notwally (talk) 19:03, 19 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Nope. And since I use my real name here, Christian Roess, this would be very easy to verify. The truth will all come out eventually. I have been transparent for my 19 years on Wikipedia. Barrett Watten documents and archives everything. He remembers everything. He literally does not forget. He is brilliant, as a scholar and as a poet. So of course he knows who I am. Apparently some disgruntled students worked assiduously for many many years to have him removed from Wayne State University. Watten still teaches there. So you can’t play Watten. You cannot toy with Barrett Watten. Once again, when I created the Barrett Watten page in February 2006, within a week he had already documented my name and what I had done on his homepage. Look it up. So of course he knows who I am. He remembers everything, so you cannot toy with him. He is nobody’s fool. But that’s hardly a COI issue on my part. In a personal note, I never began editing Wikipedia expecting the be harassed and berated like this. I’m over 60 years old. I probably should file a complaint. Christian Roess (talk) 11:47, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think you do have a complaint, and thank you for mentioning my seriousness and scrupulousness in documenting everything. Nobody needs to treated in this manner. We need a third party to take a look at this take-down. ThisDirect (talk) 22:00, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A brief note, I pinged Christian Roess because he is the one who originated the article in 2006. See the version here. I know that creating the article does not give ownership of the content, but I figured he might be interested in the topic. If you look at their user page, I suspect they are interested in poetry and poets, rather then have a COI. This doesn't mean that there isn't one, just assuming good faith based on the other pages they created. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 19:10, 19 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
GeogSage, yep, pinging presumed-non-COI folks that have shown previous interest is surely a sensible thing to do, and I certainly didn't mean to suggest that you had done anything untoward!! I appreciate y'all's hard work on the article. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 21:53, 19 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The horrible comment questioning the "approximate" date of my marriage just got my attention. Carla Harryman and I were married in 1984. I don't need to show you a wedding certificate or anything. Who do you think you are to be trifling with this? There is discussion of our marriage in The Grand Piano part 1 if you can read anything in print. This is something you do not need a secondary source for; you are not entitled to it. ThisDirect (talk) 21:55, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
See WP:RS. If your goal is to make sure no one wants to help you, you are doing a great job. – notwally (talk) 21:57, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
That sounds vaguely like a threat. I was substantiating a fact that the editor had no business impugning with the term "approximate." The sexism here is consistent--talk of "the spouse" and where she goes in the rankings of importance! Where is the gender admin for this project? I'd like to talk to them. That goes for the retaliatory editing on her site. ThisDirect (talk) 22:03, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You can find admins at WP:ANI. You should read WP:BOOMERANG before posting there, though. MrOllie (talk) 22:23, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The Wikipedia rules for sourcing in an article can be a little complex. While I knew the approximate date of your marriage, I do not see it in a published source, which generally means we can't include it in the article. I have been trying in good faith to find the sourcing to support the kind of professional connection with Harryman that I understand you as wanting to include in the article, but have not had much luck with it. Yes, I prefer gender-neutral terminology like "spouse" where available. I do not like the accusations of sexism and other bad faith. Anyway, I'm having trouble with my archive.org account, but other editors might be able to find something useful in the Grand Piano, which is available for borrowing here [4]. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 00:16, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Spouse in heading

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Pinging other recent non-COI editors on this page, including (failed ping attempt, see below). Question on the table is: should the spouse Carla Harryman go in the lede, later in the article, or not at all. (Currently, that she is his spouse is only in the infobox, which is surely not the right thing.) I am of the opinion that it should go later in the article (with connection to her work and role as a colleague). Christian Roess feels it should go in the lede. Previous BLPN discussion here Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons/Noticeboard/Archive363#Question about a professor's article. With diffs like this Special:Diff/1257676635 (now removed, but still), I think this could use the attention of some other editors. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 10:49, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I’ve got to be honest with you Russ Woodroofe. I’m finding this annoying. I don’t want this to come across as an attack on you. It’s your call, not mine. But why this scrupulous attention to WP:this or WP:that? Does everything need to follow the letter of the law? Why this insistence that a spouse doesn’t belong in the lede? Your reason can easily be misconstrued as some kind of bias on your part, just as you are predisposed (see above) to think that only a fellow university professor would be editing his page. This is all very confusing! With all due respect, I don’t think I’m the one confused here. Christian Roess (talk) 13:30, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Christian, it is coming across as an attack. Kindly comment only on the article content and not on anyone else's motivations. MrOllie (talk) 15:35, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Russ Woodroofe: I note that you tried to ping me, among others, but I have not received any ping. I don't see offhand why not, but it didn't work, and may not have worked for the other editors you included. Donald Albury 15:16, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for telling me! I may have actually done two things wrong there. @GeogSage, MrOllie, Morbidthoughts, Notwally, Nomoskedasticity, Donald Albury, Gråbergs Gråa Sång, and LEvalyn: pinging again, apologies if it is doubled for anyone. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 15:24, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It ought to be in the body of the article. Spousal relationships are typically only noted in the lead when they are a major factor in the article subject's notability, like the spouses of heads of state and such. We don't want to create the impression that he's only notable because of who he married. MrOllie (talk) 15:33, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with MrOllie. Mention of the spouse is fine in an appropriate section of the body of the text. The lead is a summary of why the subject has a WP article and of the major elements contributing to that. Donald Albury 19:54, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A "personal life" or "biography" section is the appropriate place for this information. In addition to the points made above, the lead is meant to summarize the body-- it should never contain information that is not present in the body of the article. ~ L 🌸 (talk) 20:52, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Late to the party, but I'll chime in. The spouse is perfectly appropriate for the body of the article, but I don't think they are super necessary to the lede here. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 03:57, 17 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

A call for editing assistance

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I am making an appeal to any Wikipedia editors who can assist me in editing this Barrett Watten page. Who can I ping? Let me know. I don’t have insider status or the inside track. But we have a lot of editors frequently patrolling this page who answer that kind of ping.

Wikipedia needs something more. I need something more. Are there any intrepid editors out there willing to heed this call?

Please help! If you are unsure where to start, here are 3 randomly chosen references you can use to help get you started:

  1. Marjorie Welish:https://poets.org/text/inscription
  2. Timothy Kreiner: The Politics of Writing and the Subject of History
  3. Barry Schwabsky: “Reader’s Diary: Barrett Watten’s Questions of Poetics.” Hyperallergic :https://hyperallergic.com/334998/readers-diary-barrett-watten-questions-of-poetics/

I picked those three references almost randomly from a recent Google search. If you want, locate some references yourself. And if you find something that you want to include, drop a note here or on my talk page, or edit the page yourself. Either way, I’ll follow up with you. Christian Roess (talk) 17:34, 19 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Background and summary of Language writing

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What follows is me thinking out-loud about where we need to proceed. If you really do want to help edit this page, you may (or may not) want to read further. My plan is to name the first section (after the lede) “Background”.

  • Note: I’ve saved the citations for what follows, when we and if I move it into the main article.

First we need to establish the historical context of Language writing, poetry, and poetics. Once we get that properly placed in the article, we can demonstrate how and where Watten fits in. With those links above (and many others you can find on your own), we can establish a history of language writing beginning roughly in the early 1970s and continuing all the way up until today.

“Poetics becomes a site for the construction of examples (the Objectivists and the New Americans; conceptual and site-specific art), even as it took place as a part of the larger development of literary and cultural theory in the 1970s and 1980s. Poetry and poetics, then, were crucial sites where the turn to language was articulated, due to the same cultural factors that led to the rise of theory”.—A Guide to Poetics Journal: Writing in the Expanded Field, 1982–1998 by Lyn Hejinian, Barrett Watten

Why this turn to Language by the time the early 1970s rolled around? Was the turn to Language a response—or was it a reaction— to this era of social upheaval and its apocalyptic pronouncements? Was it the Vietnam War, and the West’s interventions into Indochina that spurred this movement? Is that the correct way to frame this question?

During this time there was a “turn to theory” in the “intellectual field” and it carried over, eventually, to the university curriculum. (Watten discusses “theory death” when directing our attention to this time, but our scope is limited here on this Talk page, and I haven’t figured that out yet).

Anyhow, seemingly, theory became praxis (is there really a difference?), suddenly university classrooms and students moved out into the streets and on to the barricades (see May 68):

“the cultural challenge to authority and subjectivity of May 1968”— The Constructivist Moment: From Material Text to Cultural Poetics by Barrett Watten

What was happening during this tumultuous time? Why (for these artists and poets and students) and for those who would eventually call themselves Language poets, did this “turn to theory,” precipitate a “turn to language”? And why back then, and up until today, is Barrett Watten considered one of this movement’s primary poets/critics of that so-called turn? What are Watten’s contributions to this fraught and perilous moment?

Through the 1970s, and by the end of that decade, this group was located in the Bay Area of San Francisco. And as Steve Benson has pointed out, by the late 1970s they already are calling themselves Language poets. Of course, what is now referred to as Language poetry had other founding members and precedent figures. For example, there were various artists, poets, intellectuals, and so on, in New York City and Washington, DC (see Barry Schwabsky link above) saying they were part and parcel to this “school,” this movement.

Watten does remind us, however, that this is not only “a kind of writing but a social formation, not just an aesthetic tendency but a group of writers split between its two major urban centers, San Francisco and New York.”

Let me quickly wrap this up. Language writing/ Language poets/Poetics is not going away. From the 1980s through to today, these poets have established themselves. And distinguished themselves. In the Academy and around the world. Particularly the women associated with this group: Rae Armantrout who has received a Pulitzer Prize and National Book Critics Circle award, Lyn Hejinian:(1941-2024) who is a revered teacher, educator, and poet, along with Carla Harryman.

And there is, along with Watten, other well-known figures such as Charles Bernstein who received the Bollingen Prize, one of North America’s most esteemed awards; and Ron Silliman who commandeered one the most popular blogs ever on poetry and poetics, simply in sheer numbers alone. The blog started up before Wikipedia and YouTube. Silliman’s Blog crisscrossed paths with the age of YouTube and social media until it was discontinued a few years ago.

Thank you for your time, especially if you’ve read this far. Christian Roess (talk) 17:34, 19 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

For those who really do want to help, but…

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Right now anyone reading this can get involved and help. But let’s assume you knowing nothing about Barrett Watten, much less even why there is an article on Wikipedia about him. Let’s assume you know nothing about Language poetry (although the precise term needs to be (probably) Language writing). Well, then you’re already home free! Seriously.

“You need to walk before you run” goes the popular saying. Maybe that’s all the reason you need to start editing this Barrett Watten page. Because you have to start somewhere, and informing yourselves is a good place to begin.

But what if for you, that popular saying (“you need to walk before you run”) falls on deaf ears? What if it sounds like a cliché to you, a platitude, or nothing more than a kind of slogan? Personally, I mistrust slogans: I think they are helpful when we don’t want to think. IMHO

What can we do instead, when we’ve heard it all before? Maybe when it comes to a cliché (like the one above) we can invert that saying or turn it the other way around? Let’s say that you are already run too much, feel exhausted, and what you really want to do is unlearn running and relearn how to walk again? But this time your walk is going to be unaffectedly you. The stress, the panic, the sickness, the fear: you are tired of running: running just to stand still.

Or if that doesn’t strike you as honest, let’s borrow something from Watten himself, who once—rather poignantly— used the metaphor “driving between roads” to describe how we might test these waters, as we engage and navigate the intellectual field, as we search for poetry markers, or a way into and out of Poetics (but from the latter, there may be no “escape”. Or the way out is through.

Furthermore, the journey could feel perilous. After all, Language poetry foregrounds the materiality of language (what does that mean?) and this seems like another impediment. Or maybe not. Change your tack. Call this:

dissonance (if you are interested)Rosemarie Waldrop

In the past, and sometimes still, my reading of Language poetry garnered (or evoked) in me an odd somatic reflex. I would tell myself that the syntax “thickens” too much, or my head is in a “slough”, and even at times there was a sensation of something that wanted to spin. “Language” turns to “Languish.”

At some point all these metaphors or slogans, like those used above, probably won’t help. But what if it turns out that there is a call, not of one sort or another, but an awareness that there is Poetics. Or is it “a” poetics (with the indefinite article)? What would Louis Zukofsky say about this?

So where are we? Have we interposed (or found ourselves) somehow in the “realm” of the nonidentical? Writes Lyn Hejinian:

”The effect of Gertrude Stein’s nonidentical, nonidentifying “beginning again and again” is not just that it makes incommensurability and contradiction manifest in the nexus of modernity but that it proffers them as that nexus—as its internal condition, a salutary incoherence.” —Allegorical Moments: Call to the Everyday by Lyn Hejinian

Discussing Watten’s poem “Mode Z”, Hejinian wonders aloud about what is going on if a poem’s “specificity gets blurry” or:

…”Its parts move too fast for our perceptual skills—we lose sight of it, even as we can see that it—something—is there. Its purpose is to become different in motion from what it is when still, changing difference (its distinctive, separate bright blades) into singularity (the vaguely halo-like blur) as it does so, and thereby estranging perception.—Allegorical Moments: Call to the Everyday by Lyn Hejinian

Now where are we? Can we even talk about it? What do we talk about when we talk about Language poetry? Are we supposed to succumb to the sanctioned speech of the Academy in order to continue the conversation? Or do we have to borrow some other kind of vernacular, from somewhere else?

Or is this all a bunch of BS? Are these just “language games,” Ludwig Wittgenstein’s phrase that has often been misappropriated and made fungible, imo. What happened to context when it’s deliberately used now in a pejorative sense: eg., deliberately ignoring Wittgenstein’s summations?

Is this all sound and fury, signifying nothing? Or Fake news? News that is manufactured and tenure-tracked in Ivy Towers? Or is it just frumpy postmodernist lingo hiding that “there is no there there”?

But again, let me appeal to you to invest some time in trying to edit and improve this page. So that you have a real stake in making this a good article. That’s why we all are here working on Wikipedia.

“To owe nothing to fortune, to chance” -George Oppen

And so now where is your diverging trajectory?

And so to make a mark.

That’s all I got. Christian Roess (talk) 17:34, 19 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Christian Roess, please see WP:SOAPBOX and WP:NOTFORUM. – notwally (talk) 18:46, 19 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I really appreciate this. What is going on here is a kind of mob action being undertaken by a cohort who have little or no knowledge of the area that this article represents. It is remarkable that they believe that having no knowledge whatsoever entitles them to make the kinds of cuts they have made; something else is surely going on here. It is not unusual from the perspective of the author, who has been at the center of many "poetry wars" (for which there is an ample secondary bibliography), but what is remarkable here is the lack of any content. It seems merely a clique of like-minded editors. I applaud Christian Roess, the originator of the page, for making this effort and hope that he will not continue to be obstructed. His work to establish Wiki entries for living authors--and the range and quality of the result--certainly make him an expert. One can only hope that the Yahoos here will back off and see what he is trying to accomplish. I stand ready to supply sources and bibliography, of which there is more than anyone has acknowledged. Much of it requires reading of print texts, as well. ThisDirect (talk) 21:27, 19 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I was sent an admonitory notes from notwally, accusing me of putting down the editors. Really! The questions I would ask here are two: 1) do you know anything about the content area (and then why are you so emphatic about your editorial choices)/; and 2) are you listening to what an experienced editor like Christian Roess is saying and trying to do? It seems as if the dominant assumption is that this is some kind of board game, with arcane rules only known to insiders, something like Dungeons and Dragons, but with little relation to questions of knowledge or informing readers, who want to know. ThisDirect (talk) 00:17, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Just a heads up, this kind of comment does not look good if a dispute is brought to the attention of Admins. The "rules" are not very arcane or secret, and you can read the most important ones here Wikipedia:Civility. Following that page, I'd recommend crossing this text and the other stuff out as suggested on your talk page by @Notwally. I'm not going to report you, and I really don't want to see you get banned or have admin action against you. There are no real "right" answers to a lot of topics, and therefore discussion and consensus is important. I'd recommend contributing to some of the other pages that you're an expert on, as most of your experience is on the Barrett Watten page, and ~60 edits isn't really a lot to get the hang of the general way things are done on the site. If you have sources, please link them in the talk page. I've been busy but have looking through some of them in more detail on my to do list. Particularly, do you have a bibliography published by a 3rd party or peer-reviewed publication? For example, one of my favorite cartographers that I wrote a page for had an article published on them titled The George F. Jenks Map Collection, and A SYNOPSIS OF GEORGE F JENKS' CAREER that help us build out a picture of their contributions. Stuff like this is GOLD as we can rely on the reputations of the journal rather then performing original research. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 01:49, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This really is an attempt to silence speech. Threatening to report is really childish. I am writing to support Christian Roess, who you folks have been obstructing. My concerns are very reasonable: you are editing without knowledge of the content; and you are not responsive to other editors who have differing view, nor to the primary subject. ThisDirect (talk) 02:54, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm literally, and I can not stress this enough LITERALLY, not threatening you. I'm giving you a heads up that you're not looking civil and if someone DOES report you (who is not me because I don't plan on doing that) your comments may look uncivil. I LITERALLY do not want to see you get punitive actions taken against you, and am giving you a heads up and some advice on how to possibly avoid that situation. I'm not trying to silence you. If a discussion happens on this on a noticeboard, I'll even vouch that I think you're understandably frustrated by the situation, and should be given a lot of patience on this talk page (for what it's worth, I'm an editor with NO power). That said, you do not seem responsive to editors that have differing views then what you hold. The content here is not exactly that difficult to grasp, we're mostly discussing sourcing and formats, which is fairly universal and formulaic. I have my own approaches to these things, which others often disagree with. Discussing this stuff isn't obstruction, if you suddenly got your way on everything, do you feel if would be fair for the opposition to say you were obstructing them? As it stands, you're not exactly doing @Christian Roess many favors in the discussion in that you might scare away people who would be potential allies for you/him because they don't want to get caught up in this. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 06:30, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you ThisDirect I really appreciate your support and that you understand what I was trying to do. It is inexplicable to me as to how and why this Barrett Watten article continues to be dismantled. It boggles the mind. It does seem reasonable to assume that sabotage is deliberately occurring. Now I wake up this morning to a message from notwally (see above for my reply), asking me if there is a Conflict of Interest (COI) between Christian Roess and Barrett Watten! Asking me again after I already answered that question (in full) to Russ Woodroofe who asked me previously. It’s kind of degrading to not accept my original response. I did meet Ron Silliman at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics in 2006 at the Summer Writers Program at n Colorado, while I was still in the Army. Silliman is a friend of Barrett Watten. Does this constitute Conflict of Interest? I showed a short poem I wrote to Chris Tysh for feedback at that same SWP in 2006. She was not impressed at all. Doesn’t Tysh teach (or used to teach) at Wayne State University where Watten teaches? So maybe there’s a COI conflict? Bottom-line is I use my real name here: Christian Roess. It can easily be discovered if there is a COI problem here now or in the past. Literally as I am writing this my wife is calling for my help with our autistic son. You folks are draining my good will. It’s as clear as day that you are shooting the messenger here. Here’s the message, and it’s plain and very clear: there is a concerted effort to sabotage efforts made to make the Barrett Watten page a good article. Why? Christian Roess (talk) 12:58, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
One detail about this that I wanted to mention--in the rush to hack away at the article, which began what? in August--see the view stats--it is very likely that one element was a troll who was trying to stir things up and then offer to fix the site for a fee. So that entity may have primed the pump, but perhaps is still around? I sent an article to said fixer, using a bit.ly address, which revealed it was offshore, in Pakistan, and not really the person it claimed it was. So that might have been the catalyst. Why it is continuing is a mystery. ThisDirect (talk) 13:06, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Please, everybody remember, Civility is a policy, and assume good faith is a behavioral guideline. Violating either can have consequences. If any of you have evidence or plausible suspicions that an editor is in violation of the provisions of the behavioral guideline at Wikipedia:Conflict of interest, then take your concerns to the COI Noticeboard. While it is legitimate to politely ask an editor whether they have a conflict of interest, DO NOT make unsupported accusations of COI or cast aspersions on any editor.
On a different note, the community has long been reluctant to accept any editor's claim of expertise in a subject area. Editors may come to be regarded as experts in a topic area because of a long history of quality work on many articles in that topic area, but the community long ago (2007) rejected the idea of creating a system that would allow editors to verify their identity and expertise. - Donald Albury 17:54, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
What's important here is discretion. If an editor has no knowledge whatsoever of, say, contemporary American poetry, they should not be making hard choices about what should be included or kept out. That is common sense. It does not have to be established by any kind of credentialing. And that is in fact what is happening here. ThisDirect (talk) 18:11, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You do not need to have knowledge of American poetry to format references. The list of references that was here was filled with errors, and clearly copy pasted from either the department page or somewhere similar. I've already discussed this, and ideas for a separate list article, in depth though. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 19:01, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There were no errors in the references. Multiple errors were introduced. But the article itself contains content, which was adequately represented. Now it's a hack job, absolutely amateur. / It is pretty amazing that the goal here is "knowledge," and you are saying the only knowledge you need is knowledge of in-house rules. That's why the analogy to some kind role-playing game works; you come off as hobbyists, not people who know something. / And you are immensely defensive and unwilling to listen to those who *do* something about their work and fields. ThisDirect (talk) 19:18, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
One thing I have to say, before moving on to more productive things, is this. This is a royal waste of time, and you people should have better things to do. It is because you have no knowledge of the content that you quibble of "sources" for something as obvious as a bibliography. All those sources check out; they exist, physically, and can be accessed. They appear on numerous other published bibliographies--the literature on Language writing is extensive, with hundreds of articles. You don't know that, however. On the other hand, I work with bibliographies as a professional academic and critic continuously. No one requires a "peer-reviewed" bibliography. Articles and books are peer-reviewed; advanced degrees are peer-reviewed; tenure is peer-reviewed; election to the Academy is peer-reviewed. There are checks on accuracy everywhere you look. This nit-picking shows you simply are outside that structure, but all the works cited and referenced are produced within. There is no falsifying of anything going on here, except your credentials to be qualified to make decisions about this content. That's my position, and I'll stick to it. ThisDirect (talk) 19:34, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You apparently are not comfortable with how Wikipedia works. The prime criteria for content in a Wikipedia article is that it is supported by reliable published sources. If any content is challenged, it must be backed up by citations to reliable sources. If the reliability of a source is challenged, the community must reach a consensus on its reliability. If there is a dispute over the form and/or content of an article, the community (at least, that part which is paying attention to the dispute) must reach a consensus, while heeding policies and guidelines, on that form and content. No editor gets a more powerful say in discussions than any other editor in good standing. If you are not comfortable working within that format, then editing Wikipedia may not be for you. Donald Albury 21:39, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the lecture! I use Wikipedia all the time, and I cite sources, edit articles, write books, direct students. What is going on here is a mechanical use of sources when knowledge in the field is available for summary from multiple (many) sources, which is the usual way it gets presented. Knowing the field and citing sources go together. Only one of those is happening here, which is why the editors have been hacking away. And there is not a consensus--a skilled editor with excellent skills and knowledge, apparently, is trying to improve the site from the bad state it is in. Let's hope you can find a way to work with what he knows. ThisDirect (talk) 23:02, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
ThisDirect, please read Wikipedia:Expert editors and drop the confrontational attitude. Cullen328 (talk) 23:06, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The version of the page before I started editing is still visible in the history here. The bibliography here was, to use your own words, absolutely amateur, in my opinion at least. For example, if you search the page, you'll see that there are several instances where it says "link here" without a link. While this could be link rot, as they were never hyperlinked to begin with, I believe they are a sloppy copy paste from another page. After going through the sources a bit, I believe that the body of work could be described with prose, and if necessary a separate bibliography page created. This is what I have started to do. I can work on a separate list article for the bibliography if I can get sources verifying it is notable enough to stand alone. We don't generally include every chapter, article, and review in an academics page, and usually stick to a few major publications noted by 3rd party sources. Another heads up, read WP:Civil. Your hostility will not look good if an admin gets involved, you can discuss this without being confrontational and aggressive. I know it's frustrating, but I don't want to see you hit with blocks. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 23:24, 20 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, but the extreme cutting to this page was the opposite of civil, and you can see that easily. It is adversarial, and for what reason? / Before I attempted to improve the articles and monograph about my work, there was a dedicated section with absolute garbage--out of date, poor quality. The articles cited were recent and substantial, the kind of thing someone looking for more would go to. The links were bit.ly's and thus non accepted--those could be easily cleaned up. / But what is vulnerable here is your individual preference to make a narrative out of the sources. That is very problematic precisely in the area of knowledge. You would not know how to interpret them. I could tell you what is important or interesting in each one, but that's not my job. Better simply to have a list bibliography, as is done on every other BLP author pages I have seen (or cinematographers or jazz musicians or painters, etc.). It's just standard to give a chronological list, and thus highly aggressive to erase it. / Please try to work with Christian to get this right. Over and out. ThisDirect (talk) 00:05, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Editing the page is not personal. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 02:05, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Well and good. So you would not stick to a point of view if convinced otherwise, if it was not representing the subject accurately or adequately etc. / I will put up some resources for bibliographic and reception history in the next day or two. ThisDirect (talk) 03:01, 21 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

A call for editing assistance: #2

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Here is my second call for editors who can help me by providing input. Specifically re: sourcing and bibliographical questions as we proceed. My first call for assistance was made on November 19. No editor has stepped forward and spoken of their desire to improve the content of the Barrett Watten page.

  1. My plan is to begin transferring much of the material from the section above (labeled: Background and summary of Language writing) into the main Barrett Watten article, replete with sourcing, citations, and endnotes. I will begin the transfer no later than November 26.
  2. Meanwhile, I’m going to add another section to the BW page documenting the “Critical reception” of Watten’s work. And I will restore a minimally acceptable standard Bibliography section to the BW page. And probably a Works Cited section. More details to follow.

Are there any editors that can assist me with that, or have any suggestions on improving this article? Christian Roess (talk) 14:40, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you for your call for help. I just did some research on Wikipedia comps, and what I found was instructive. Below are notes from the nine other members of the Grand Piano group plus Charles Bernstein and Bruce Andrews, all poets who are discussed together. There is a wide range of quality in the articles; some are overhyped (Bernstein); some seem deliberately underdeveloped (Andrews). The best written, with the best account of aesthetics, is Perelman. Robinson is succinct. Carla Harryman's was slashed to nothing by three editors associated with this page, one of whom leaves a quote indicating his gender bias. A major takeaway is that all but one have substantial list bibliographies, which is the standard, not incorporation into narrative. Here is the data; I will be providing more information for this project. Let's make this the best of the lot!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Perelman / Personal Life: full discussion of Francie Shaw; good treatment of L writing; quotation from work; chronological bibliography
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Silliman / Marriage and family: wife and two sons / Not a good account of L writing / Substantial bibliography; some critical studies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyn_Hejinian / Biography: first marriage; works marriage into bio / Undeveloped discussion of work and L writing / Substantial bibliography; works in translation; some critical studies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Bernstein_(poet) / Lede is hyped; edited volumes up front / Personal life: lists family / Career discusses publication, not aesthetics; no account of Language writing / Reception is inflated; substantial bibliography; edited volumes; some critical studies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Andrews / minimal content in each category; no mention of relationship with Sally Silvers / poor discussion of Language writing per se; comparison with co-editor Bernstein is telling / Bibliography is one para plus list of e-books; confusing and unhelpful
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Mandel_(poet) / marriage to poet and psychotherapist Beth Joselow in lede / bio is interesting; “Writing” is underdeveloped / substantial bibliography in list form
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rae_Armantrout / lede is career accomplishments / lots about recognition and publications / “Style” distinguishes her work from other Language writers / Personal life: education and marriage, where she lives / Substantial bibliography; lists poems in the New Yorker; little on critical response
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kit_Robinson / short lede / concise account of life and work; no mention of family / substantial list bibliography; no critical response
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Pearson / minimal lede / Life and work not developed; mentions Sheila Lloyd and residence / Substantial list bibliography; no critical response
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Benson_(poet) / short lede; Benson is single / Life and work are underdeveloped; short discussion of Language writing / List bibliography not up to date; no critical response
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carla_Harryman / Page was cut back to a stub by aggressive editing / Lede is inadequate; life and work are a stub / Substantial list bibliography / Personal life has reference to BW; GeogSage writes “Moved personal life to end of article as I think their personal life is likely of very little consequence in terms of what makes them notable.”
The point is that a successful article needs a shaping hand that considers what is unique and distinctive, showing importance but also giving insight. It is not just a cobbled-together pile of sources, and when it is it spectacularly fails any coherence. ThisDirect (talk) 15:22, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you ThisDirect, this is excellent and relevant editorial feedback. I think that if we can set the standard with the Barrett Watten page, we can use it as the fulcrum for revision of the other pages you’ve listed. I plan on revising all these pages for the sake of Wikipedia’s readers, now and in the future. Thank you! Christian Roess (talk) 15:51, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
(Edit conflict, responding to Christian Roess). You did not get many responses previously, for one reason because you posted a WP:WALLOFTEXT. I did look at the sources you posted at the time. The first and third were reliably sourced reviews, which are generally worth including somewhere in the references (since they indicate impact). The first might be particularly useful, since it reviews a collected works volume, although I found the writing of this review to be a little impenetrable. I think that the article could support a Critical Reception section incorporating reviews. OTOH, past consensus has been that the works of Watten are better addressed with the prose "Major works" section than a Selected works section. WP:NOTDIRECTORY is relevant. I do not see anything in the "Background and summary of language writing" that could conceivably go into the article. As you know, Wikipedia does not publish original research, but only summarizes what has been already published in reliable sources. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 15:24, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you Russ Woodroofe for your feedback and your willingness to jump into the fray. But also to offer substantive editorial input. Let me first talk about original research. So is the wall of text I provided above original research on my part? No, the part I titled “Background and summary of Language writing” is not original research. It may sound like original research, but it is not. If it sounds like original research, that is due to my own stylistic (mannerisms/poetic ) choices. So this section does need to be rewritten in an encyclopedic tone.
Therefore, I will be reintroducing the same material from above (“Background and summary of Language writing”) into the Barrett Watten article but using an encyclopedic style. But you are correct: I will show with citations that it provides the background and History of Language poetry accurately, and that background & history has at least 40+ years of documented evidence to support it. So for example, Language poetry/writing had specific origination points in the 1970s. How did we get from there to here now in 2024? I sometimes think of it as a chain of dissemination (source + message + channel + audience). The latter chain can be shown and documented, and it would not be original research. Christian Roess (talk) 17:15, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Be sure to review Wikipedia:No original research#Synthesis of published material. I'm not saying that this is exactly what is happening as I haven't seen the full original sources for the claims, but it is an easy trap to fall into if you're not careful. Specifically "A and B, therefore, C" is acceptable only if a reliable source has published the same argument concerning the topic of the article. If a single source says "A" in one context, and "B" in another, without connecting them, and does not provide an argument of "therefore C", then "therefore C" cannot be used in any article." I still believe that the length of bibliography would likely justify a separate list article, rather then breaking up prose to insert it. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 18:01, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that the proposed text looks like original research, and it also does not seem to discuss much about the biography of the article subject. WP:COATRACK is probably also a useful essay to review. – notwally (talk) 18:17, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for the heads up Notwally and Georgsage. I’m tracking! Christian Roess (talk) 18:24, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You have identified many problems with other Wikipedia pages, and presumably have sources and expertise on the topic. You could work on flushing them out and fixing them. If you don't know them personally, it isn't a COI. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 00:05, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Draft of bibliography page

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I have created a draft space for Draft:Barrett Watten bibliography. I can not guarantee this pass verification, but am working under the assumption that there are 3rd party publications that detail the collection of works. I started filling out one table based on the previous sections listed in the bibliography I and others had condensed to prose. If it passes verification, we will just need to set it up as the "{"{main|Page}"}" under the section heading. I believe this compromise satisfies all people involved. I'll be working on this a bit more in the coming days, but wanted to kick it off so others could contribute on the draft space. Please see Wikipedia:WikiProject Bibliographies for more details. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 19:05, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

This just out--publication announcement of Russian/English Selected Writings. Click on Table of Contents to see works selected from; in a couple of cases, these are MSS but for most part all are easy to find online (abe.com is a great place to verify), and the bibliography is reproduced in numerous publications, including the special issue of Aerial, the DLB bio note. In any case, I hope this will give some fresh energy for the project. https://barrettwatten.net/texts/document-104-not-this/2024/11/ ThisDirect (talk) 20:41, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
GeogSage, I think this is a good and rather perceptive idea . It shows a certain level of (maybe the word is discernment) on your part. Count me in. I’m kind of fascinated by bibliographies, and extensive ‘bibliographic notes’ sections in the back matter of a book, and so on. Interesting the way you are formatting the bibliographic table, too. I think we can make it work Christian Roess (talk) 05:26, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. I recently reworked the pages for geographers Waldo Tobler and Mark Monmonier to have their publications as prose, and then moved the bibliography to Waldo Tobler bibliography and Mark Monmonier bibliography. Those last two pages is what I loosely based this draft on. Glad that it seems to be acceptable. The main thing is, and I can't stress this enough, we will need a 3rd party citation to verify that the bibliography is notable for a standalone list. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 21:56, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wait a minute--who sets a rule like that? And what do you mean by a "third-party citation"? There are rehearsals of the basic bibliography all over the place, for instance in the Dictionary of Literary Biography, which is good up to 1998. That should do it. Also the festschrift published in 1995. Also *A Guide to Poetics Journal*, a peer-reviewed and thoroughly fact-checked anthology, prints a summary bibliography (p. 168). The reason to list the 11 comparable Wiki articles on Language poets above (9 of whom are co-authors in The Grand Piano) is to show that in every case but one there is a list bibliography; only the most undeveloped and inadequate does it your way (Bruce Andrews). This is a case of sallying forth with an experience in a completely other zone of bibliography, on authors in no way related to avant-garde poetry, where the sequence of publications is entirely the point. Compare the sequence of important works of cubism, etc. / Finally, since I have your attention, the correct date for *Bad History* is 1998; you cite the second printing in 2002. My first published work, which has been left out in the past but which surfaced on abe.com for the price of $800, is titled *Radio Day in Soma City*, and I now claim it. The Selected Writings from Moscow is just out as well; please include it. ThisDirect (talk) 23:53, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Any article, including a bibliography, must meet the requirements of Wikipedia:Notability#Notability requires verifiable evidence, which says, No subject is automatically or inherently notable merely because it exists: the evidence must show the topic has gained significant independent coverage or recognition, and that this was not a mere short-term interest, nor a result of promotional activity or indiscriminate publicity, nor is the topic unsuitable for any other reason. Sources of evidence include recognized peer-reviewed publications, credible and authoritative books, reputable media sources, and other reliable sources generally. Donald Albury 00:32, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, and the bibliography in the Dictionary of Literary Biography meets that test. You are simply out of your league here; don't know what counts or doesn't count. You folks should drop this; it's BS. ThisDirect (talk) 05:04, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Not everyone reads the entire conversation, and not everyone is hostile. @Donald Albury did not say that this wasn't possible, they are only explaining the requirements of sources on Wikipedia. There is a minimum threshold before a bibliography deserves an article, otherwise literally any graduate student with a few publications would warrant one. The page Wikipedia:Notability (academics) goes into this a bit, but I think can be summarized with the ""Average Professor Test": When judged against the average impact of a researcher in a given field, does this researcher stand out as clearly more notable or more accomplished?" I have a copy of the dictionary entry you are referring to and it certainly should be enough to get it started. Are there other resources similar? The more, the better. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 16:22, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Meanwhile, I have bibliographical notes already prepared in the past 24 hours and a copy of Dictionary of Literary Biography (DLB 193) and a kindle edition of Guide to Poetics Journal to assist in this project. I don’t know about you all but this should be an enjoyable process. If it is for you all too, then I am grateful. And that’s before we have even started. Christian Roess (talk) 18:24, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Call to restore biographical and bibliographic information

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Thisdirect issues a call to rectify the removal of verifiable biographical and bibliographical information from this page. ThisDirect (talk) 15:50, 8 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Returning to the page to see if anything has been done to return this page to a modicum of accuracy, I immediately stumble across the egregious errors left in place by editors who had no knowledge of context and little access to sources.
One that stands out is the misreading of BW's father's profession as a "physicist." No, he was a physician and a specialist in tropical medicine, as well as an early developer of the artificial kidney. See below, and the DLB article.
The gendered assumptions of giving information only about BW's father is also telling (i.e., a good example of sexism). BW's mother, Jeanne Alderton Watten, was notable as a gallerist in Taipei, Taiwan from 1967–74, when the family left. The gallery supported modernist art, which was politically difficult in that period. A recent article talks about her gallery:
https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2024/04/04/2003815917
https://taiwantoday.tw/news.php?unit=20,29,35,45&post=25426
Then, another excision that was a real howler was removing poet Ron Silliman's name from the poets BW met at Berkeley. That has been amply documented, for instance in a blog post on Silliman's Blog that has been archived:
https://www.writing.upenn.edu/epc/mirrors/ronsilliman.blogspot.com/2008/10/when-i-first-met-barrett-watten-in-1965.html
Thanks for you attention. ThisDirect (talk) 16:02, 8 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Good to see the bibliography coming in; note that Zone, from Chax Press, is in press and due out in 2025. The Russian bilingual edition is here. Good to see also father's occupation corrected; in the "early life" section you might indeed add the material on Jeanne Alderton Watten's gallery in Taipei; see links provided. It would be good to have Ron Silliman added to poets met at Berkeley in that crucial period; this is spelled out in the article from Critical Inquiry, which is peer-reviewed and accurate. Other student poets met at Berkeley were Rae Armantrout, who would go on to win the Pulitzer Prize, David Bromige, Curtis Faville, and Robert Glück, an important poet associated with "New Narrative" writing. Then, in this section, there is too great a jump from the MFA at Iowa--where BW worked with poets Anselm Hollo and Donald Justice, and had a seminar with Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, the noted translator of Jacques Derrida and postcolonial theorist. That section could well end in 1972, with BW's return to California (Mendocino County) and then arrival in San Francisco in 1973, where he renewed acquaintance with Silliman and was at the center of the new group of poets who would become the "West Coast Language writers." The material on returning to Berkeley and the PhD should come later, after two decades working in arts programs and as an academic editor. The dissertation, on Gertrude Stein and Laura (Riding) Jackson, is notable for its focus on women experimental modernists. Finally, in the lede important that BW is an award-winning "critic"--so, "poet, critic, editor, and educator" would be accurate, and his teaching--well established by the faculty page, which lists courses, is "modernist and avant-garde studies, poetry and poetics, literary theory, and postmodern culture" at least. "Cultural studies" is too diffuse. See list of dissertations etc. ThisDirect (talk) 20:03, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Editing update

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In anticipation of a forthcoming separate BW book bibliography page on Wikipedia, it is important to restore here a minimally required Selected bibliography, which I have done. I am glad for continued participation as you all see fit. If there continues to be some delay, it is partly due to the necessity of conforming to Wikipedia standards as has been extensively outlined here for a BLP. And while I don’t contest the formal need to tag this talk page for its COI issues, there are no COI issues to adding a “Selected bibliography” section to the article. These publications have entered the public domain and there is no controversy or conflict that the publications are material facts. My bibliography note to the newly added section provides a framework that makes this clear to the reader of Wikipedia. I assume good faith that your typical reader of this BW page can maneuver through the bibliography without difficulty. It’s rather generic in its format that mirrors other similar bibliographies that can be found on Wikipedia. Christian Roess (talk) 15:26, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

There were prior discussions that resulted in the current "Major work and publications" section as the way to present his published works, using prose rather than a list. I have removed the bibliography you have added for now until some kind of consensus can be reached with other editors. I would also note that the "Note" section that was included in the bibliography you added is not relevant without independent sourcing showing it is noteworthy. – notwally (talk) 20:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This is obstructive, hostile editing to no purpose. The editor is conforming to practice seen among virtually all of the comparable figures (see above). Notwally is on a vendetta, and we have ample evidence of this. There needs to be a complaint; this is harassment. ThisDirect (talk) 23:19, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
While consensus can eventually change, I do not see any evidence that it has at this time. Good revert. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 23:58, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Starrygrandma where are you? This destructive editing needs guidance. ThisDirect (talk) 03:23, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
WP:CANVASSnotwally (talk) 18:55, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Please provide me the link to the consensus to present his published works, using prose rather than a list. Otherwise I will revert this edit.
Why will I revert? Watten has been publishing work for more than 50 years. How is it possible to present that in prose? And in a major works section? You do not have any other choice here, but to do it in a Selected bibliography format. It can even be shorter than the one I presented. Otherwise how can anyone understand what they’re looking at? The only thing you all are telling me is that you’ve reached consensus to do it the wrong way: to present bibliographic material the wrong way. Think about it. 50+ years of publishing hundreds and hundreds of articles, books, listserv participation for almost two decades, now archived, etc etc and so on. And so on. The only way to show that, to encompass that for any Wikipedia readers, is to present a snapshot for the reader in an abbreviated, selected bibliography. Why? Because that’s how you give a reader the picture in his/her mind of the arc and trajectory of an author’s work, especially as extensive as Watten’s. Our job here at Wikipedia is not to present exhaustive research, and page after page of material. We are providing snapshots. So once Again show me the consensus for your unprecedented and willful procedure to discuss a prolific author with decades of published work in a few prose paragraphs? Christian Roess (talk) 13:59, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"The responsibility for achieving consensus for inclusion is on those seeking to include disputed content." WP:ONUSnotwally (talk) 18:52, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I’ve seen no evidence of consensus that says we should not be using a bibliographical format for this article. That doesn’t make sense. And you’re saying that BW’s publications need to be formatted into a “prose”? Wikipedia as a whole doesn’t have such standards. Can you send me even one link to a major author on Wikipedia with more than two dozen publications, who does not have a Bibliography listing? And instead is offered in prose? I’m reverting your edit in the next 48 hours, if I don’t get some valid feedback. Christian Roess (talk)| Christian Roess (talk) 19:24, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You need to gain consensus to restore disputed content. – notwally (talk) 19:28, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Come on. That isn’t going to fly. Bibliographical content is disputed? This standard listing of the published work of BW and inserted into a standard Wikipedia bibliographical format is disputed? Come now, you aren’t going to play Big Brother here and casually throw things down the Memory hole and continue to believe you are going to get away with it. We’re talking about a bibliography. Are you sure you want to continue to go down this Orwellian road? Christian Roess (talk) 19:44, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Christian, the onus is on the one making the addition to get consensus support. This is basic Wikipedia stuff, and making personal attacks is not going to help you get your way. MrOllie (talk) 19:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The original bibliography, which was in place over the first, what, fifteen years of its existence, was in list style. This was changed via a mob action--numerous editors with no knowledge of content, and really no interest in the subject--taking down as much material as possible in August 24. Check the history. The editor is simply restoring to the original and commonsense form; the outliers are the negative editors, whose only interest is in having a fight without content. Thank you Christian Roess! ThisDirect (talk) 19:58, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Mr. Ollie, you’ve got your information from that upside down mirror you are holding in your hand. I consider your reply a personal attack on me. I am being only transparent with my intentions and pointing out the absurdity of these front-line statements. We’re talking about a Bibliography and that content is almost never in dispute in the generic format provided on Wikipedia. Christian Roess (talk) 19:58, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Just chiming in, finishing the bibliography page is on my list, but I've been really busy with grading and other work related priorities. I'm reasonably confident that there is enough sources to pass verification. The draft is open though, and I made it in draft space instead of my sandbox so others here could contribute more freely. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 03:27, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I have over 1000 citations on Academia.edu. Do you volunteer to go through them? This is ridiculous; if you knew the field, you would not be asking these highly unfocused questions. ThisDirect (talk) 03:31, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
https://www.academia.edu/mentions?from_navbar=true&trigger=nav ThisDirect (talk) 03:34, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There is no need to be hostile. Raw citation metrics are not what is needed for a stand alone bibliography page. We need published lists of the works. For example, in another bibliography I'm working on for George F. Jenks I'm citing the publications A SYNOPSIS OF GEORGE F JENKS' CAREER and In Memoriam: George F. Jenks (1916-1996) as they both have lists of his publications. Then, I'm using the paper The George F. Jenks Map Collection which discusses the collections of his work at The Kenneth Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas, with the library's website serving to corroborate these. This one is still a work in progress, but I'm confident it can pass verification due to three publications discussing his body of work as a topic. In the Watten case, I'm relying on the Dictionary of Literary Biography: American Poets Since World War II. This should be enough, but I'd like one more 3rd party document that clearly discusses the collection as a topic in of itself. I doubt there are many people who know "the field" enough to have these kinds of bibliographical sources ready at the drop of a hat, but if any of them are in the talk page, please feel free to provide them. GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 00:41, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
That is not a standard. It may be for a historical or deceased figure. I'm an advanced academic; I work on bibliographies all the time; I never see this. You are simply making things up that do not apply.
It's also interesting the way you, and the other editors, consistently totally ignore and deny the proliferation of evidence, and example, that you are way off base.
For instance, you do not believe that 1400 mentions on Academia.edu is meaningful. The point is that, if one were to search through one by one, every concern you have about citations would be answered. What does that mean? That BW is a highly recognized author, in the field of American poetry and poetics. That is simply incontrovertible.
The next example is the Leslie Scalapino page. This is a very well edited by a member of the same generation as BW, who died in 2010. The bibliography is a model. Your example, above, of George F. Jenks is irrelevant to this field. You could look at Larry Eigner's archive at Kansas, however, to see what one of us looks like there.
George F. Jenks is a cartographer. The authors we are talking about are artists. Their publications are works of art (when they are creative), not just references. Each one is distinctive, and readers need to know the range of the work. When it comes to poet/critics, the same thing obtains. The critical work is read along with the development of the work.
With you, its not so much hostility but plain ignorance of contemporary literature. You should temper your pseudo-professional claims with some experience of the content area. I will keep sticking to this basic point.
P.S. the introduction to the Russian/English Selected Writings does all that you ask, as does the introduction to the bilingual collection in Spanish, which is a bit older. But I am getting tired of catering to unreasonableness. ThisDirect (talk) 01:49, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The standards for biographies of a living person are higher then for deceased figures, and the standards for stand alone bibliographies different still. Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons, Wikipedia:Notability (academics), and Wikipedia:Stand-alone_lists#Notability give more details.
You work on bibliographies as an advanced academic. I have publications in journals as well, the standards and goals are different on Wikipedia. In academic writing, we are creating new content, and personal reputations, as well as our institutions, are what give some credibility to that content. On Wikipedia, we are entirely reliant on the work published by others for our claims. Wikipedia is not a publisher of original thought.
Mentions on Academia.edu are not really what I would use to measure notability, it's like ResearchGate but more predatory. The ".edu" domain is really sketchy as it is a for profit company. That said, one of my former advisors has a bit more then 3,000 citations and an i10-index of 40 on their Google Scholar profile, and I couldn't write a page about them if I tried because no one has published anything about them specifically I could use to verify anything. I could write an article about them based on my personal knowledge for a journal, and that could serve as a source for a Wikipedia page if published. I can look at the CV on Barrett Watten University page and press Ctrl-C Ctrl-V as easily as anyone (and I'd remember to remove the "link" to nowhere throughout), but that is no more a source then the list of publications on any academics University page. Look at the reference sections on The Beatles albums discography, or on the page Edgar Allan Poe bibliography. Wikipedia is not the place to demonstrate they are notable, it's a place for demonstrably notable content. The cool thing about using outside sources to verify the claims is that I don't need any knowledge of the literature itself, I could rely on the source and format the page to contain the information in an alien language on a topic that humans don't have words for if I knew what symbols were titles, dates, etc.
I just want sources that give a list of the works, and I have one I'm working with but I don't believe it is complete, so I am looking for others. Looking at Barrett Watten's personal website here, it looks like I'd need to literally violate International sanctions during the Russian invasion of Ukraine to order a copy of the Russian/English Selected Writings. Do you have a URL, ISBN, DOI, or title for the Spanish collection? I can go through interlibrary loan if I need (I'd prefer not to), but I need a starting point. I'm sorry you're getting tired, please remember Wikipeida is not compulsory, "Wikipedia is a volunteer community and does not require Wikipedians to give any more time and effort than they wish. Focus on improving the encyclopedia itself, rather than demanding more from other Wikipedians. Editors are free to take a break or leave Wikipedia at any time." GeogSage (⚔Chat?⚔) 07:00, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I will try not to respond to this dismissively, but it is a waste of time. I see you have a perspective on "public-facing" humanities; so do I. That informs your preference for a prose bibliography, and mine for a list.
There is no evidence, however, that editors of comparable sites agree with you. If you look at the list above, or the Leslie Scalapino page, you can see that the list bibliography is the most useful, especially for authors who work among genre categories and do original creative work. I will try not to repeat this point too much, but you have obviously not taken any of it into account. You are staying on your "get the academics out of the ivory tower" high horse.
The BW bibliography on the faculty page, to begin with, is standard among all the publications that cite my published works--for primary texts and critical volumes. Multiple examples of this; please stop querying. The recent articles and critical response are from my evolving comprehensive bibliography, now at 160 pp. All of these articles and responses can be checked, and there are many more. I won't be sending it to you.
As for the Russian publication--are you a federal agent, wanting to cite a violation of import sanctions as a Wikipedia editor? What a impertinent idea. Are you saying a publication in Russia cannot be cited?
You can certainly order a copy; I have three dozen here, just shipped, and the Interbok distribution in Sweden can provide. My book isn't listed yet as it just arrived, but here is the site with Lyn Hejinian's book from the same publisher, published in 2023:
https://interbok.se/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=21866&search=hejinian
Your personal preferences apply to your field of expert knowledge, but not to contemporary literature and not to the goal of getting academics out of the Ivory Tower, which in your case probably means theory, deconstruction, language-centered writing, Marxism, and so on.
Russian ISBN: 9785990712294
Spanish ISBN: 9788483523346 / Los Mejores Poetas Americanos Contemporaneos: Charles Bernstein, Lyn Hejinian, Ron Silliman, Barrett Watten Hardcover – January 1, 2011 / I should get that intro autotranslated. ThisDirect (talk) 15:15, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The Leslie Scalapino page--originated by Christian Roess?--is an excellent comp. Full bibliography, divided into essential components. Read up! ThisDirect (talk) 22:53, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

My editing update on Dec 18, 2024

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As I discussed with you above a month ago (November 18, 2024) in my call for editing assistance, I would be conducting a significant overhaul of this page using the outline I gave for review to you all. I am nearly done with my first part of the editing, but from the 1990s onward, I still must do another overhaul. So that part is off the table, unless you are willing to take it on before I do in the coming days. I ask that you do not do any reverts or deletions without discussing it first here on the Talk page. I received only some minor concerns from one or two of you, so I am not expecting any backlash. Just helpful input. Christian Roess (talk) 19:21, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Christan, we should follow the process at WP:BRD here, as is done on pretty much every other page of the Wikipedia. That means that you can expect that people will revert or delete things they disagree with without being required to discuss it with you first - this is the standard practice for Wikipedia editing. MrOllie (talk) 19:23, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
That is not particularly honorable, as I always try to discuss what I’m doing on the Talk page. I would hope that someone out there has the compunction to honor both the spirit and the letter of the law. But it would require operating and moving in liminal space. Something which poetry and poetics can teach us how to do without falling out of someone’s grace. Patience and reserve as a pretext to good faith. Christian Roess (talk) 19:59, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You may not find it honorable, but it is the community norm on this website. You should do your best to adapt to how the community here does things, as that is more likely than the community adapting to your preferences. MrOllie (talk) 20:11, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This talk about "community norms" is just another form of assertion without content. I'd like to provide some feedback to Christian's effort in terms of content. Here are a few thoughts.
Language writing and "turn to language." Hundreds of articles and books have been written about Language writing and it is very difficult to summarize in a short paragraph. But I would try to distinguish the emergence of "language-centered writing" from the "turn to language." "L-centered writing" arose as such in early 70s magazines and journals, particularly This, tottel's, Alcheringa, and a few others. It was primarily bicoastal--West and East Coasts, with a "third city" in Washington and a few other figures elsewhere. But the two (plus one) communities that were the center of activity were SF and NY by 1975. While This magazine had an early galvanizing role, it was not the sole origin. In poetry, there are many predecessors to L writing but what was different was the explicit understanding of a movement. Then, the "turn to language" is a broader phenomenon, associated in philosophy with Richard Rorty, Wittgenstein, Jacques Derrida. So Language writing is a part of a larger intellectual trend.
Hope that is helpful. Feshchenko is good on all this. ThisDirect (talk) 01:56, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. I just saw this now. This is helpful BW. I need to check the sources I am using. For one thing, the way I am emphasizing “the turn to language” here, gives it an “evental” nomination it does not have (perhaps as a result of reading too much Alain Badiou back in 2007-2008). This phrase (”the turn to language”) has almost taken on the quality of a meme for me. By changing and altering the emphasis of this phrase, it causes a horizon shift that alters the integrity of the chronological presentation of the West Coast/Bay Area emergence of Language writing in its historical details. My remarks here now, of course, still have a provisional focus, so I need to continue to sort through my presentation of this chronology again in the BW article so it adheres to its present encyclopedic/Wikipedian form. Thanks again! Christian Roess (talk) 19:58, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that the "turn to language" had the dynamics of an "event." In the 70s, after the destruction of the war for one thing, artists of all kinds turned to the basics. They asked basic questions about form, medium, exhibition, etc. For L poets, this meant to take poetry apart as language and build it back (better?). But the other side of this was questioning the narrowness of genres--in the visual arts, painting and sculpture, in literature prose and poetry. The interdisciplinary move was the other half of the picture--this happened in my biography with programs in alternative art spaces in SF and elsewhere--80 Langton Street/New Langton Arts. That also led to a reaction--the Poetry Wars and NEA disfunding about 1984. The larger "turn to language" thus extended across disciplines--philosophy, poetry, conceptual art, etc. and so it too was an interdisciplinary moment. You could say the "event" of theory was precisely that, and Fred Jameson's last work is about that--*The Theory Years*. ThisDirect (talk) 14:34, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I am concerned that the section "The Background of Language Writing" seems to constitute original research. I was unable to verify most of the claims present in that section. I am secondarily concerned that the rather flowery language in that section is bordering on WP:PEACOCK. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 19:02, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This seems like original research because you have no knowledge of the field. Even wikipedia can do better: here is the entry for Language poetry: Language poets
And this is a lengthy history of Language writing from 1994, available online:
https://web.archive.org/web/20160303234914/http://home.jps.net/~nada/language1.htm
There are, I believe, about 8 chapters of that account--early on, and there is much out there in the later 90s and past the millennium.
The point is that your queries have no basis. If you want to be helpful, please read up on this field of literature and the subject at hand, and help create a meaningful article if you are so inclined. ThisDirect (talk) 20:46, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The sources in that section of the article do not support the content. I did not quickly find sources that did -- in particular, the (apparently self-published??) account that you link did not seem to support it. We can't use a Wikipedia page as a source. It is possible that some of the source on that page could be useful. The onus is on the editor(s) that wish to include the content to source it. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 22:20, 21 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Again, without any form of judgment about content, within a field, how would you know how to evaluate any source? The article is perfectly well supported and has been accepted in the field; everything in there has multiple references. Also, I believe there is some discussion above against you radical right originalists about whether every last half sentence needs a footnote. Obviously not. Any one writing on a given topic writes in an area in which the topic is established; the footnotes describe the perimeters of that area as well as a source for any knew knowledge. Humanists do this all the time: here are the key works on say postcolonial poetics, and the claims here refer to that larger discourse, not to individual factoids. This must even be true in STEM fields, though claims are much narrower. But finally--please go out an educate yourself to the extent of writing on this topic. BTW the Eliana Kim was not self-published. The skepticism here is simply obstructive, finally. She's a professor at UC Irvine and an excellent literary historian. ThisDirect (talk) 01:42, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
And why isn't the Wiki page, its tested factual claims and extensive bibliography, not a source? This is the most ridiculous thing I've heard yet. The Wiki page gives a good compressed history of the Language movement; it is fact-checked and footnoted, and works in tandem with the current page. ThisDirect (talk) 01:45, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia summarizes reliable sources. Reliable source has a technical meaning, and explicitly excludes Wikipedia. The section in question presently does not summarize a reliable source or sources, as any editor can see. Self-published just means that it has not gone through editorial review, and is not any kind of slam on the author. A note that an expert just puts up on her web page is self-published, if it also appears in a journal or other publication, then it is not. Russ Woodroofe (talk) 09:48, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You can quibble all you want. The information is out there that establishes the wider field, with dozens of books and articles into the hundreds. Wikipedia articles are routinely linked in other articles (as in this one); then they provide bibliographies which can be used (and checked if you really need to) that establish the statements made there. Those bolster the present article, and they also point to how there is every reason to have good bibliographies, in accessible list form, of primary texts and secondary sources. This is how a field gets built up. As for material online without review, I am unaware that there is a policy that all online content must be peer-reviewed. And, because of the laziness of Wiki editors or lack of access to libraries, print sources are often simply left out. Numerous chapters in printed books in poetics back all this up. In this case of Eliana Kim, the articles were internet essays on the web site of poet Nada Gordon from 1994, and they were well received and frequently cited. The reason I provided them is that they give a wide account of the field as it was at the time; it's a narrative that will increase comprehension. You can check for other references till the cows come home, and you will find hundreds that corroborate Kim's narrative. / Again, these concerns are not constructive but destructive; your main goal is to interfere with the writing of a narrative, a perspective, an article on a topic you do not understand. ThisDirect (talk) 15:20, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If there’s an operative word to describe where Barrett Watten is located, that word would be contestation. If I was asked for my “theory of the subject,” there it is.
Let’s assume you are correct Russ Woodroofe, instead of what seems evident to me (that you do not want to admit that you have an entrenched position and therefore the only things you do see are facts that confirm your already held position). And that’s called “confirmation bias”.
But I’ll assume, for argument’s sake, that you are correct: that this is original research (it’s not,
ok?), but you are under the assumption that this is original research. You are asserting that this section on the Background of Language Writing in its West Coast (Bay Area) configuration as it occurred in its historical details while that same history in itself was unfolding…then your argument is that there is no effort here to summarize already existing sources to make this claim on the BW page. So you tagged it as being Original Research.
But if you dig deeper into the sources, most of them, if not all of the sources, are already in place. And if they’re not in place yet, the sources were there before, but they’ve been willfully removed. Again, they’ve been contested and removed. Recently, and over and over again since 2019 (check the page History if you have any doubts) they’ve been removed.
For example, let’s say you’re reading this article and you believe that there is no source backing up the claim that Watten is part of the West Coast Language poetry group. Well citation #8 (from Barry Schwabsky) reads that Language poetry had

“concentrations in the Bay Area and New York (with an important outpost in Washington, DC), and many of the participants (notably Watten himself) turned to the study of poetics (and concomitantly, though Watten doesn’t highlight this, to an academic grounding for practices that had at first been understood as counter-institutional).

Ok, it states clearly that Watten was part of that configuration of Language poets and Language Writing that took place in the Bay Area in San Francisco on the West Coast. But the key to really understanding what is happening as the historical details unfolded (which is determined in retrospect, though the latter claim is also more than a little misleading) is the assertion that in the socio-political and cultural sphere that this Language Writing movement is grounded was “counter-institutional.”
Watten always positions himself in contestation. That’s not my opinion, that is a fact. Just look close to home. You are right in the middle of it here Russ Woodroofe trying to edit the Watten Wikipedia article and you don’t see where this is relevant? You can’t attest to this agon site on your own? You’re contributing to the anger and vitriol right now. Even when Watten does not “highlight this himself.” (as Schwabsky asserts in the above quote). So you may have missed it? It says it right there! In the citation. Counter-institutional. Contestation is the highlighted birth-mark.
Such a thing has long term effects. So today, just do a google search, type in the search field: West Coast Language poets. (Note: AI lists Watten, but it’s impossible to dig further and find a source for AI’s claim: that doesn’t conform to the institutional protocols of Wikipedia which you are policing right now, Russ Woodroofe).
My point is that what you come up with in Google Search is evident if you know what to look for, and understand what you are looking at. The search results list Leslie Scalapino, Rae Armantrout (with little ambiguity) , and Ron Silliman clearly marked as West Coast Language poets. In Leslie Scalapino’s and Ron Silliman’s cases, the search results are at their Poetry Foundation author page. They both have an author page devoted to them at the Poetry Foundation. How about the Barrett Watten author page? You won’t find it, because there is no author page. Why is that? Can you admit that this is a glaring omission based on the citations provided on BW’s Wikipedia page? Do you care?
In the case of Armantrout, the latter’s author page is at poets.org—-The Academy of American Poets—-but what does it say it on Barrett Watten’s page at The Academy of American Poets?
Afterall, Watten has been writing, editing, teaching and publishing for over 50 years. Surely there’s an author page available. Nope. There is no Barrett Watten author page on the Academy of American Poets website.
Is that not a striking omission to you? That the two most prominent, preeminent, noteworthy, and distinguished websites (I can provide citations if you don’t believe me) in the United States and in the Angosphere simply do not have a Barrett Watten author page? It should not be hard to understand for you Russ Woodroofe because you know that there still is not an acceptable article on Wikipedia, and you are a part of that, you are involved in that ommission. It’s no reach at all to assume that others (Poetry Foundation and The Academy of American Poets) are dealing with the same contestation. Can you have any doubts?
What’s going on? You already know the answer. You are witnessing what is happening even as it occurs before your eyes. Barrett Watten’s page is in the epicenter of contestation. Right here. Right now. Read the quote above from Barry Schwabsky. Language poetry’s originary moment was counter-institutional, and that has grounded all that has followed.
Barrett Watten never loses, has never lost, sight of that originary moment, that grounding. There is nothing more institutional than the Poetry Foundation and the Academy of American Poets. You think they’re going to make an exception for Barrett Watten? Nonsense. Wikipedia can’t even put a stop to 5 years of destruction and the undermining of the BW page. Wikipedia is institutional.
Isn’t that an eye opener? Doesn’t that tell you something? Should I lay it out for you any more clearly?
I’m not a goody-goody, trying to teach you a lesson Russ Woodroofe. To you this is a wall of words: soapboxing. Mark my words, you’ll double-down, and dig your heels in harder to insist you are right.
Simply put, I am stating this not for you really, but for the record. Because Wikipedia archives Article Talk pages. This is going into the record for any future reader who wants to dig further into the records to discover for themselves what really happened. Christian Roess (talk) 20:19, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • I agree with Russ Woodroofe's concerns about original research and flowery language in the "Background of Language Writing" section. There are also several parts of the "Career" section that are unsourced. Content should be based on independent, published, reliable sources and presented in a neutral, unbiased manner that is proportional to their weight given in the sources. – notwally (talk) 20:54, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    Published and reliable but not necessarily peer-reviewed. Eliana Kim is gold mine. ThisDirect (talk) 21:03, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
    Attending to obstructive and indefensible editing:
    From its inception, and in the beginning stages of its growth and development, Watten played an instrumental role in the early stages of Language Writing/Language poetry that was developing in the Bay Area: a region uniquely situated as it “fostered collectivity, contention, and iconoclasm.”
    This is everywhere in the literature; it is to the heart of the subject being discussed here. Please revert. See Kim.
    In summary, Watten's poetry and critical writings, including his editing and publishing, have been widely acknowledged, since the mid 1970s, as crucial to its social and cultural development.[note 1] In all facets of Language Writing’s origin, growth, development, dissemination, and reception, Watten has played an integral part.
    The editing of This and This is universally recognized. Please revert. See Kim and any number of other sources.
    From the 1970s through the 1980s and beyond, as Language poetry gained attention, it became a flashpoint for other poetry schools and aesthetic tendencies, leading to heated confrontations and debates. Watten found himself in the crosshairs of a particularly contentious falling out with the New American Poetry group when he and Robert Duncan were both giving talks at a colloquium on the poetry of Louis Zukofsky. Duncan interrupted Watten’s presentation until Watten was finally unable to finish his presentation. Thereafter, Watten became by default one of the central figures in “The Poetry Wars” that followed.
    After Watten’s move to academia in the 1990s, these debates continued in other forums such as online venues and listservs.
    There is an entire book devoted to these debates, with a chapter on the events discussed. See Chaitas.
    Please revert these uninformed elisions. A number of articles in the talk page above have already been supplied, but obviously have not been consulted. ThisDirect (talk) 21:17, 22 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference auto was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

ThisDirect, thank you for the dissertation link. While leaning too much on a dissertation (which has gotten some review, but not necessarily as much as a book or article) is not ideal, providing sources is generally helpful. I went looking for more sources myself. The NY Times obit of Lyn Hejinian [5] has a brief discussion of language poetry. The "Language Poetry" chapter of the Cambridge Introduction to American Poetry since 1945 [6] (unfortunately, not so easy to find) looks like a gold standard source. It 1) Describes the movement and its origins in San Francisco _and New York_, 2) Overviews features, describing as post-modern and avant-gard, 3) Describes work of Bernstein, Silliman, Hejinian, Armantrout, and Howe (though not Watten), 4) Overviews criticism of the movement, particularly of a "default whiteness" perspective.

Also, I reverted much of Christian Roess's changes to the career section. I would be interested in somewhat expanding the career and work section in a WP:NPOV and WP:V compliant manner, but the changes there were neither. One aspect that seems to get short shrift: sources (Hejiman obit, Cambridge chapter, particularly also this piece in The Nation [7] ) seem to highlight Poetics Journal as especially influential in the development of the movement, and this is covered only very briefly in the article. 14:34, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
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