Ronald Johnson's Modernist Collage Poetry is the first monograph to address the legacy of the American poet, Ronald Johnson (1935-1998). Drawing upon never before seen archival material, this book sets out to understand Johnson's poetry in the context of the "New American" collage tradition, stretching from Ezra Pound to Louis Zukofsky and beyond. Additionally, Ross Hair assesses Johnson's work in relation to wider questions concerning literary chronologies, especially the discontinuities commonly seen to exist between nineteenth-century Romantic and twentieth-century modernist literary forms.
Introduction: congeries of word and light -- Johnson's new transcendentalism -- Luminous detail: Ezra Pound and collage -- Visual integrity in The book of the green man -- Johnson's different musics -- Orphic apocrypha: radios and the found text -- A mosaic of cosmos: ARK's bricolage poetics.