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Caterpillar, Sulfur, transition.

Our take

Dive into the vibrant world of poetry with the Centre for Expanded Poetics' Archive section, featuring the complete runs of three influential publications: *Caterpillar* (1967-1973), *Sulfur* (1981-2000), and *transition* (1927-1938). *Caterpillar*, initiated by Clayton Eshleman, emerged as a groundbreaking series of chapbooks, showcasing innovative voices and transformative ideas. Meanwhile, *Sulfur* and *transition* pushed the boundaries of poetic expression in their respective eras, inviting readers to explore the evolution of thought
Caterpillar, Sulfur, transition.

I was excited to discover that the Centre for Expanded Poetics has an Archive section that presents the complete runs of Caterpillar (1967-1973), Sulfur (1981-2000), and transition (1927-1938). I don’t remember being aware of the first (which you can read about here: “Caterpillar was started by Clayton Eshleman as a series of chapbooks by such writers as Jackson Mac Low, David Antin, Paul Blackburn, and Louis Zukofsky”), but the other two are very familiar; I was excited when Sulfur first came out (I’ve probably got the first few issues kicking around somewhere), and of course transition is known to every aficionado of English-language modernism. What a gift to the online world!

For those who don’t care about defunct little magazines, try sengi, which is really two different words, one meaning ‘elephant shrew’ (from Swahili sengi, probably from another Bantu language) and the other the name of a former monetary unit of Zaire, one hundredth of a likuta and one ten-thousandth of a zaire — you might think it was named after the little mammal, but no, it’s from Kongo sengi, senki, from French cinq (in the sense of five sous). The second is in the OED but not, so far, the first.

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Tagged with

#language evolution#philosophy of language#humor in language#creative language use#word meaning#placeholder words#Caterpillar#Sulfur#transition#Centre for Expanded Poetics#Archive#Clayton Eshleman#chapbooks#Jackson Mac Low#David Antin#Paul Blackburn#Louis Zukofsky#defunct little magazines#English-language modernism#sengi