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Critical Commentary On Mark Doty

’s MY ALEXANDRIA Essay, Research Paper


Deborah Landau


The poems of My Alexandria transform homophobic narratives


about the disease, offer comfort to those living with HIV, and encourage empathy from


those whose lives have not yet been affected by the virus…. Although Doty’s poems


are not polemical, they counter reductive representations of people with AIDS, are


accessible to a wider audience, and have the potential to improve public response to the


epidemic…. His poems expose the codes that map meaning onto the HIV-positive body,


destabilize the complex cultural networks that construct gay male identity in the context


of the AIDS epidemic, and forge a transformed and transforming language in which to


articulate love and loss…. For Doty, poetry is a medium for imagining temporary


exemption from history, from the physical and cultural constraints that circumscribe


sensation and experience. By revealing the myths and politics that construct the AIDS


epidemic and by depicting individual acts that defy the pressure of those constructions, My


Alexandria transforms the terms that limit the lives and deaths of people with AIDS.


From Deborah Landau, "‘How to Live. What to Do.’: The Poetics and


Politics of AIDS," American Literature vol. 68, no.1 (1996), pp. 193-225.


Tony Whedon


With hi

s rhapsodic inclusiveness, Doty performs a kind of meditation through which the


wounds of memory are healed. In many of his poems, the meditation blooms from the spirit


of his narrative, appearing often in what seems like an extended addenda—or


cadenza—to the poem. The tone of these meditations is thoughtful, almost essay-like,


enfolding the poem in a membrane of sensuous exposition. In a lesser poet, this exposition


might intrude on the poem, might seem like an apology for what the more dramatic parts of


the poem fail to offer. But Doty employs these to distance the principal event of the


poem, to invest the event with a mysterious sensuousness afforded him through the shimmer


of memory.


From Tony Whedon, "Let Me Go, If I Have to, In Brilliance," Poetry East,


no.35 (1993), pp. 160-61.


Diann Blakely Shoaf


Like Cavafy, whose native city the title of this new collection alludes to, Mark Doty


is a poet of desire and loss, of the monuments and ruins belonging to ancient and modern,


"high" and "popular" cultures alike. The ancient world as underlying


our own, and the multilayered mysteries revealed through excavation, imagined or actual,


are subjects that have served Doty before.


From Diann Blakely Shoaf, review of My Alexandria, Harvard Review (Spring


1993).

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