James Wagner (born 1969) is an American poet. The poet and critic Joyelle McSweeney wrote that the poems in his first collection, the false sun recordings, "form a semi-coherent push-me/pull-you-type dialogue about stability and wholeness, by turns humorous... and serious. In recent works such as The Idiocy and Query/Xombies, Wagner focuses on the searching qualities of human existence, whether through logical argument (and its attendant pitfalls), or through the medium of the search engine, nominally the modern oracle. His third and most recent collection of poetry, Thrown, poems to paintings by Bracha L. Ettinger, was cited by poet Eileen Tabios for its imaginative intensity, ambition and lyrical prowess.
The literary scholar and critic Carla Billitteri has written in an introduction to WagnerâÂÂs work given at the University of Maine:
<blockquote>The quality of WagnerâÂÂs own poetry reflect the profound cognitive turn caused by homophonic translations, and reflect WagnerâÂÂs translinguistic sensibilityâÂÂhis way of thinking his own language from the vantage point of other languages and other cultures. Thus WagnerâÂÂs writing often seems to call usâÂÂand demands our attentionâÂÂfrom a region close, but not too familiar, a region dislocated in time and languagesâÂÂa region of radical dislocation. </blockquote>
Further, the poet and critic Rachel Galvin has written: âÂÂWagnerâÂÂs Trilce stakes out its ludic freedom somewhat in the spirit of Vallejo and emphasizes above all its indifference to questions of âÂÂfidelityâ in translation.â And Michael Smith (poet) and Valentino Gianuzzi, editors and translators of a 2012 edition of Vallejo's poems, call Wagner's Trilce, "the latest homage to VallejoâÂÂs most difficult book."
The poet and critic Laura Sims has written of his first book, the false sun recordings:
<blockquote>James WagnerâÂÂs debut collection strikes the reader instantly as a highly musical, humorous and playful chaos â¦This varied blend of elements supports the inquiry Wagner conducts, via poetry, into how language relates (and does not relate) to meaning and human existence. He prefaces his entire collection, in fact, with a quote from WittgensteinâÂÂs Philosophical Investigations, âÂÂCan I say âÂÂbububuâ and mean âÂÂIf it doesnâÂÂt rain I shall go for a walkâÂÂ?,â which sets the stage perfectly. Instead of feeding us an easy answer, Wagner grapples in plain sight with this and other questions. We, in turn, are inspired to struggle with the ambiguities ourselves, and this greatly enriches our reading experience. </blockquote>
In addition, Wagner has written two books of stories, Work Book and GeisttraumâÂÂTales from the Germans, which focuses on a rural community in Wisconsin haunted, in part, by a priest. The poet and critic Vanessa Place has said of Geisttraum: âÂÂLanguage as solid and fearsome as the religious American Middle West: plain, transparent and similarly constituent of its own allegorical surface. A sussurating surface that threatens always to slip under itself and away.âÂÂ
Significant influences on his work include: Paul Celan, Marjorie Welish, Leslie Scalapino, César Vallejo, Clark Coolidge, Lissa Wolsak, Tan Lin, Steve Timm, Michael Burkard, Julian Talamantez Brolaski, Paul Maliszewski, John Cage, Buddhist philosophy, Samuel Beckett, Peter Handke, and Werner Herzog.
the false sun recordings (3rd bed, 2003)
Trilce, (Calamari Press, 2006)
Work Book, with drawings by Edgar Arceneaux, (Nothing Moments, 2007)
GeisttraumâÂÂTales from the Germans (Esther, 2010)
Query/Xombies (Esther, 2010)
The Idiocy: Plays (Esther, 2012)
Thrown, poems to paintings by Bracha L. Ettinger (There Press, 2014)
TracesÃÂ Poems to Paintings, Nava Waxman & James Wagner
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20. Wagner, James (2015) https://www.spdbooks.org/AdvancedSearch/DefaultWfilter.aspx?SearchTerm=PubName&PublisherName=Ceratonia+Siliqua+Press<nowiki/>