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The New Yorker: Poetry chevron_right

Arthur Sze Reads Robert Hass

Nov 18, 2020
32:44
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1
Introduction
00:00 • 2min
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2
It Is Good Sometimes for Poetry to Disenchant Us
02:16 • 2min
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3
Aspen's Doing Something in the Wind
04:24 • 2min
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4
The Aspen and the World Are Doing Something
06:14 • 2min
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5
The Tree Dance
08:05 • 2min
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6
What's the Meaning of Vectors?
09:39 • 4min
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7
Is There Something Unseen That Connects Them?
13:45 • 2min
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8
Yno Brushing Danger on the Side of an Apom Bomb
15:49 • 2min
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9
The Carver Smilled Its Butter in My Hands
17:58 • 2min
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10
Have You Lived With Utmost Care?
20:25 • 2min
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11
Hi Ku in Chinese Poems
21:56 • 2min
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12
How Do You Approach Classical Chinese Poems?
24:15 • 2min
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13
What Was It Like Putting Together Your New Poems?
25:51 • 2min
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14
The Glass Constellation
27:28 • 5min
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Arthur Sze joins Kevin Young to read “The Problem of Describing Trees,” by Robert Hass, and his own poem “Vectors.” Sze has received the Landon Literary Award, the Jackson Poetry Prize and, in 2019, the National Book Award in Poetry.

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