An Atmospherics of the City
2015
Baudelaire and the Poetics of Noise
Part of the Verbal Arts: Studies in Poetics series
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"The title of Ross Chambers' brilliant work encapsulates its central paradox: it defines poetry not as music, but as noise; not as formal order, but as what cuts against it: its atmospherics."
- Vassar College
"Ross Chambers's argument is an appropriately murky one that centres on Baudelaire's awakening to 'noise' - 'alienating din, steady background hum, unruly disorder bordering on chaos but also a certain intriguing strange-ness' - as the defining characteristic of a fallen or historical world."
- Times Literary Supplement
"The book, moving seamlessly between close analyses of poems and broader theoretical contextualization, is a model for scholarship in the rigorous and delicate attention it pays to the texture of poems; the ease of move between singular details and universal categories; the depth and clarity of thought expressed in precise prose; deep erudition condensed into concise footnotes that keep to the ess
- University of Virginia

