- Carl Rakosi
Carl Rakosi (
November 6 ,1903 –June 25 ,2004 ) was the last surviving member of the original group of poets who were given the rubric Objectivist. He was still publishing and performing his poetry well into his 90s.Early life
Rakosi was born in
Berlin and lived there and inHungary until 1910, when he moved to theUnited States to live with his father and stepmother. His father was a jeweler and watchmaker inChicago and later in Gary,Indiana . The family lived in semi-poverty but contrived to send him to theUniversity of Chicago and then to theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison . At university, he started writing poetry. On graduating, he worked for a time as a social worker, then returned to college to study psychology. At this time, he changed his name to Callman Rawley because he felt he stood a better chance of being employed if he had a more American-sounding name. After a spell as a psychologist and teacher, he returned to social work for the rest of his working life.Early writings
At the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Rakosi edited the "Wisconsin Literary Magazine". His own poetry at this stage was influenced by
W. B. Yeats ,Wallace Stevens , andE. E. Cummings . He also started readingWilliam Carlos Williams andT. S. Eliot . By 1925, he was publishing poems in "The Little Review" and "Nation".Pound and the Objectivists
By the late 1920s, Rakosi was in correspondence with
Ezra Pound , who promptedLouis Zukofsky to contact him. This led to Rakosi's inclusion in the Objectivist issue of "Poetry" and in the "Objectivist Anthology". Rakosi himself had reservations about the Objectivist tag, feeling that the poets involved were too different from each other to form a group in any meaningful sense of the word. He did, however, especially admire the work ofCharles Reznikoff .Later career
Like a number of his fellow Objectivists, Rakosi abandoned poetry in the 1940s. After his 1941 "Selected Poems" he dedicated himself to social work and apparently neither read nor wrote any poetry at all. A letter from the English poet
Andrew Crozier about his early poetry was the trigger that started Rakosi writing again. His first book in 26 years, "Amulet" was published by New Directions in 1967 and his "Collected Poems" in 1986 by theNational Poetry Foundation . These were followed by several more volumes and he gave readings across theUnited States andEurope .In early November 2003, Rakosi celebrated his 100th birthday with friends at the San Francisco Public Library. Upon his death Jacket Magazine editor
John Tranter observed the following: Quotation|Poet Carl Rakosi died on Friday afternoon June 25 at the age of 100, after a series of strokes, in his home in San Francisco. My wife Lyn and I were passing through California in November 2003, and we stopped by to have a coffee with Carl at his home in Sunset. By a lucky coincidence, it happened to be his 100th birthday. He was, as always, kind, thoughtful, bright and alert, and as sharp as a pin. We felt privileged to know him.External links
* [http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/rakosi/rakosi.htm Rakosi at Modern American Poetry]
* [http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/testing/html/mss0355a.html The Carl Rakosi Papers]
* [http://www.archive.org/audio/audio-details-db.php?collection=other_minds&collectionid=CarlRakosiReading Carl Rakosi Reading and Interview on KPFA's Ode To Gravity,13 May 1971 (from The Internet Archive)]
* [http://books.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,11617,1248964,00.html Obituary in The Guardian, UK]
* [http://jacketmagazine.com/25/index.shtml Carl Rakosi feature at Jacket Magazine] includes Rakosi in conversation with Tom Devaney & Olivier Brossard; link to audio recordings at University of Pennsylvania, and poems, dedications & remembrances from Jane Augustine,Robert Creeley ,Laurie Duggan , Michael Heller andKent Johnson
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