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Seven Stories Press

Works of Radical Imagination

Ryan Ruby and Gary Indiana at McNally Jackson Seaport (New York)

November18 at McNally Jackson Seaport in New York, NY

Ryan Ruby presents Context Collapse: A Poem Containing a History of Poetry, in conversation with Gary Indiana

Monday, November 18th at 6:30pm ET

McNally Jackson Seaport
4 Fulton St. 
New York, NY 10038

RSVP HERE: https://www.mcnallyjackson.com/event/ryan-ruby-presents-context-collapse-poem-containing-history-poetry-conversation

Literary critic Ryan Ruby uncovers the secret history of poetry in a mock-academic verse essay filled with wit and wisdom.

Prophet. Entertainer. Courtier. Criminal. Revolutionary. Critic. Scholar. Nobody. Epic in sweep, Context Collapse is the secret history of the poet—from Bronze Age Greece and Renaissance Italy to the cafés of Grub Street and the Latin Quarter, from the creative writing departments of the American Midwest to the boardrooms of Silicon Valley.

Cheekily introducing academic discourse, media studies, cybersemiotics, literary sociology, and heterodox economics into his blank verse study of poetry, Ruby traces the always delicate dance between poets, their publishers, and their audiences, and shows how, time and time again, the social, technological, and aesthetic experiments that appear in poetic language have prefigured radical changes to the ways of life of millions of people. It is precisely to poets to whom we ought to turn to catch a glimpse, as Shelley once put it, of the “gigantic shadows futurity casts on the present.”

"Ruby’s effortless synthesis of artistic, cultural, and technological developments makes him an excellent historical guide, and the verse essay format—consciously modeled on the argumentative poetry of Parmenides and Alexander Pope, among others—proves a novel reading experience. This literary history stands in a class all its own." Publisher's Weekly

"Ryan Ruby has written a daring kind of essay. The verse text and verse footnotes conflate and flail, destabilizing and stylizing one another like conjoined twins." —Don Mee Choi, author of DMZ Colony

"What a joy it is to think alongside Ryan Ruby. In Context Collapse, critical argument and literary history become sensuous and playful, provocative in the best sense and, by the end, deeply moving." —Phil Klay, author of Redeployment

"Context Collapse is an erudite and a perceptive essay in the form of a poem, which traces the history of poetry from ancient orality to the electronic age. Using both the line and the footnote in a self-referential and sophisticated performance, it argues that what poetry is depends on the economic, social and technological conditions of its production." —Eugene Ostashevsky, author of The Feeling Sonnets


Ryan Ruby is a critic, novelist, and translator from French. He is the author of The Zero and the One: A Novel (Twelve Books, 2017) and his criticism has appeared in the New York Times, the NationPOETRY, the Believer, the Point, and the New Left Review. He is the recipient of the 2019 Albert Einstein Fellowship from the Einstein Forum in Potsdam, and the Robert B. Silvers Prize for Literary Criticism. He currently teaches creative writing at the Berlin Writers’ Workshop.

Gary Indiana is a novelist and critic who has chronicled the despair and hysteria of America in the late twentieth century. His books include Horse Crazy (1989), Do Everything in the Dark (2003), Resentment: A Comedy, Three Month Fever: The Andrew Cunanan Story (1999), and Depraved Indifference (2002), and Rent Boy (1994). In 2015 he published his “anti-memoir” I Can Give You Anything But Love. Called one of "the most brilliant critics writing in America today" by the London Review of Books, "the punk poet and pillar of lower-Manhattan society" by Jamaica Kincaid, and "one of the most important chroniclers of the modern psyche" by the Guardian, Gary Indiana remains both inimitable and impossible to pin down.

November18, 7.00pm

4 Fulton Street
New York, NY 10038 United States