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Tender Buttons (Corrected Centennial)
Tender Buttons (Corrected Centennial) | Gertrude Stein
17 posts | 22 read | 10 to read
The MLA Committee on Scholarly Editions has awarded "Tender Buttons: The Corrected Centennial Edition" its seal designating it an MLA Approved Edition.2014 marks the one hundredth anniversary of the original publication of Gertrude Stein's groundbreaking modernist classic, "Tender Buttons." This centennial edition is the first and only version to incorporate Stein's own handwritten correctionsfound in a first-edition copy at the University of Coloradoas well as corrections discovered among her papers at the Beinecke Library at Yale University. Editor Seth Perlow has assembled a text with over one hundred emendations, resulting in the first version of "Tender Buttons" that truly reflects its author's intentions. These changes are detailed in Perlow's "Note on the Text," which describes the editorial process and lists the specific variants for the benefit of future scholars. The book includes facsimile images of some of Stein's handwritten edits and lists of corrections, as well as an afterword by noted contemporary poet and scholar Juliana Spahr. A compact, attractive edition suitable for general readers as well as scholars, "Tender Buttons: The Corrected Centennial Edition" is unique among the available versions of this classic text and is destined to become the standard.Gertrude Stein (18741946) was one of the most important and innovative American writers of literary modernism, as well as one of the great art collectors and salon hosts of the period. A pioneering lesbian writer, Stein lived most of her life in Paris but became a celebrity in the United States with the publication of "The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas" (1933).Seth Perlow teaches English at Oklahoma State University.Juliana Spahr teaches writing at Mills College. ""Tender Buttons" was recently reissued by City Lights Books, to mark the centennial of a volume that broke language barriers, acknowledging hungers to see more. It challenged with inspired daring."--Barbara Berman, "The Rumpus" "For the centennial of this masterpiece, Seth Perlow has given us much the best edition of the poem, based on Stein s manuscript and corrections she made to the first edition. Punctuation, spelling, format, and a few phrases are affected and most especially the change in the capitalization of the section titles. 'The difference is spreading.'"--Charles Bernstein, University of Pennsylvania, author of "Attack of the Difficult Poems: Essays and Inventions" "Happy 100th birthday, "TENDER BUTTONS." You are as explosive, tantalizing, and delicious as you were on the day you were born. Your birthday gift from Seth Perlow and Juliana Spahr is a beautiful new edition that will carry you into your next century, the best edition ever. Your birthday gift from all of us who love literature and culture is to buy this edition for ourselves and all our friends. Congratulations to all."--Catharine R. Stimpson, Professor, New York University, and co-editor of the two-volume "Gertrude Stein: Writings" published by the Library of America The publication of an authoritative edition of "Tender Buttons," with Stein s hitherto unpublished corrections and editions, is a splendid way to celebrate the centennial of this influential modernist work. Scholars will benefit from the full documentation, and readers will appreciate its convenient format, which resembles the original publication. --Jonathan Culler, Cornell University "This radical multi-dimensional generative cubist text with the simplest words imaginable continues to alter and shape poetics into the post post modernist future. We have Gertrude Stein's 'mind grammar' operating at full tilt, with unpredictability, wit and sensory prevarication. Look to the 'minutes particulars, ' Blake admonished, and here she does just that: 'it is a winning cake.' Salvos to the editor and salient 'afterword' that give belletristic notes and political perspective as well. A unique edition."--Anne Waldman, The Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics"
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Libby1
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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Pickpick

Totally nonsensical, this book is impossible to rate, or even to understand in any coherent way. However, dipping in and out of the nonsense evokes a strange joy.

I‘ll leave you with the book‘s final thought, and if you figure out what this means you are a genius:

“The care with which there is an incredible justice and likeness, all this makes a magnificent asparagus, and also a fountain.”

Thanks, @SerialReader !

#MagnificentAsparagus

Lindy It combines three things I love—asparagus, fountains and justice—so it sounds joyous... whatever the sentence means. 3y
Libby1 @Lindy - how wonderful! Your comment brings joy to me. ❤️ 3y
Creadnorthey Read out load the sense of it is in the beauty of the sounds the words make- and it is beautiful. Sense not so important. 3y
Libby1 I think you‘re right, @Creadnorthey . I did enjoy that aspect of it as well. Quite often it made me laugh in sheer disbelief, but that is not a bad thing. 3y
Creadnorthey @Libby1 I know what you mean- it‘s incredible how her book stays with you- I can‘t remember any one line, but have this feeling of joy when I think about the words I read many, many years ago. Like you said it‘s a great book to dip into. 3y
41 likes5 comments
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Libby1
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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A New Yorker article from 1934 describing Gertrude Stein‘s driving ability, (or lack of it!) and comparing it with her writing style.

This gave me a chuckle as these poems are a HOT MESS.

rwmg 🤣 3y
31 likes1 comment
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Libby1
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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This book is STRANGE.

I think I should wander about and randomly spout off lines like,

“The sudden spoon is the wound in the decision.”

🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄🥄

GondorGirl 🤣🤣🤣 3y
PurpleyPumpkin 😂‼️ 3y
Lcsmcat I had the same reaction! 3y
Libby1 @GondorGirl , @PurpleyPumpkin , @Lcsmcat - I‘m not even trying to figure it out. I‘m just going to let it wash over me. 🌊 3y
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Lcsmcat
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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You can quote a title, right? 🤷🏻‍♀️ #buttons #quotsynov18 @TK-421

TK-421 Sure, why not? 😄 5y
38 likes1 comment
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Lindy
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“Rhubarb is susan not susan not seat in bunch toys not wild and laughable not in little places not in neglect and vegetable not in fold coal age not please.” -Gertrude Stein

A quote for @AnneCecilie plus a photo collage to show the hail stones that came down on my rhubarb on Friday.

saresmoore Holy cow! 6y
Lindy @saresmoore Fortunately, the hail came only over a short period. Unfortunately, it was followed by a torrential downpour. 6y
saresmoore I hope your rhubarb fares well. 6y
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DivineDiana Oh my! 😳 6y
Lindy @saresmoore @DivineDiana The rhubarb is fine; the leaves just look like they‘ve been used for target practice. 🎯 (But that‘s not the edible part anyway.) 6y
saresmoore I was wondering if the leaves were edible. They certainly look delicious! 6y
Lindy @saresmoore The leaves are actually poisonous. That‘s an important thing to know if you are preparing rhubarb. 6y
AnneCecilie There definitely is a rhyme and musicality to her sentences, but I'm not sure about how much sense they make. On a side note, I wish for rain, it has been unusually dry this summer and the farmers are struggling 6y
Lindy @AnneCecilie I don‘t understand her sentences either! Still, I enjoy them. Hope some rain comes your way soon. We‘ve had 3 years or more of drought in Edmonton, so I‘m happy about the rain. 6y
AnneCecilie @Lindy We haven't gone years with no rain, just a couple of months with 5% of the usual rain. 6y
Lindy @AnneCecilie It‘s the same here: drought conditions in my area means far less moisture (snow and rain combined) than we usually receive, not no rain at all. The trees are showing stress. 6y
36 likes11 comments
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AnneCecilie
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Gertrude Stein was a prominent figure in Paris during “La Belle Époque”. She knew Picasso, Hemingway, Ezra Pound and Matisse. She called them the “Lost Generation”.

So when I saw this green penguin classic, I wanted to find out what her writing was like. I‘ve now read some 50 pages of the above example, and don‘t know what to make of it. It‘s just rambling, or has someone read her and can tell me what I‘m missing?

#24in48

DivineDiana I have not read her writing, but I am currently reading about her in a book about Picasso. She also has a prominent role in the Genius- Picasso series on TV. I was born in Baltimore and a few weeks ago stood in front of her childhood home there. I am fascinated by her, but have not yet read her writing. However, there is a fabulous shop in NYC called “Tender Buttons” that I have visited! 😀 6y
Lindy Adam Gopnik wrote about her style, calling it Steinese, and how it influenced Hemingway and subsequent American writers: www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/understanding-steinese/amp 6y
Lindy Try thinking of Stein‘s poetry as cubist art. Carly Sitrin wrote about Tender Buttons: “The words themselves are not challenging, just as a piece of cubist art is nothing more than a simple color or shape; the art comes from the organization as a whole. Stein‘s work is not meant to be analyzed word by word.” 6y
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Lindy Sitrin continues: “Rather, she intends her poetry to be digested all at once, in the “continuous present” with every word carrying the same weight because every word contains within it the essence of the whole.” 6y
Lindy As it happens, I just finished a contemporary novel that takes its name from a quote by Stein: “There is no there there.” (She was lamenting that ‘her‘ Oakland, the place she knew in her youth, had become something different.) 6y
AnneCecilie @Lindy thanks for the article, that was really an interesting read. Talking about her punctuation use or lack there of and especially commas. That didn't really bother me, since I'm not good at using commas. And her writing has a certain flow to it. My issue was that when there is a heading I expect her musing to be about that. In that regard my screen shot was probably not the best example. 6y
AnneCecilie @Lindy for example there is a heading with the title "Eating" and it sound like this " Eel us eel us with no no pea no pea cool, no pea cool cooler, no pea cooler with a land cost in, with a land cost in stretches." Guess I was expecting something more straight forward about eating. 6y
AnneCecilie @Lindy I've seen that book around Litsy a lot lately, is it any good? 6y
AnneCecilie @DivaDiane I've not seen that series. I missed the first episode, and I tend to not jump in afterwards. Would you recommend it? What a cool name for a store 6y
Lindy @AnneCecilie There There is fantastic. I gave it 5 stars on Goodreads. 👍 6y
Lindy @AnneCecilie Stein plays with words and the sounds within words. I like the excerpt you quoted with eels and peas! 6y
AnneCecilie @Lindy guess I just wasn't prepared for her writing style, and her play with words and sounds. But it does have a certain flow, that makes it easy to read. If I was to read her again, I least I know what I'm getting myself info. 6y
Lindy @AnneCecilie 😊👍 6y
Weaponxgirl I haven't read this one but I found her autobiography of Gertrude b stein very hard going. I haven't read anymore by her for that reason even though I think she herself seems fascinating 6y
DivaDiane @AnneCecilie , I think you meant @DivineDiana ! 6y
DivineDiana @DivaDiane Thank you! This hasn‘t happened in a while! 😉 (edited) 6y
DivineDiana Yes, the series is well done! I am watching the series On Demand. 6y
DivaDiane @DivineDiana I think you‘re right! 6y
AnneCecilie @DivineDiana @DivaDiane I'm really sorry about the tagging mistake. 6y
AnneCecilie @Weaponxgirl yes, she doesn't have the easiest writing style to follow, but she does have a certain rhyme and musicality. She sounds like an interesting woman 6y
DivineDiana @AnneCecilie It is an easy mistake. No apology needed! 😊 6y
DivaDiane @AnneCecilie Yes, it‘s really no problem! We‘ve discovered it‘s a very easy mistake to make and we can usually tell if the other was meant. 😊 6y
42 likes22 comments
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AnneCecilie
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Ready to start book 6 for #24in48

Book not in the database, but it's excerpt from the tagged book.

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vivastory
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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Best button ever.

suvata 😂 6y
ladym30 Adorable! 6y
Erinsuereads Oh man where did you find that???? I need that! 6y
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JoScho ❤️❤️❤️ 6y
vivastory @ErinSueG It was included in my Strand quarterly box 6y
saresmoore I love it! 6y
RebelReader That‘s awesome! 6y
LeahBergen Love it! 6y
Moray_Reads 😂😂 6y
saresmoore Listen, I‘m here as a friend. You may get an email about an NYRB sale. BE STRONG! There will be other sales in the future! Think of what you can buy with the money you save: gas, electricity, Internet, food, bookish clothing, ice cream! Resist and persist, my friend. 💪😬 6y
vivastory @saresmoore The only reason I will be able to resist is because I'm currently without a bank card. Although I'm hopeful it arrives before the sale ends. 50% off 5 or more, Sara! They're practically free!! 6y
saresmoore 😂 6y
readordierachel Ha! That's perfect. 6y
JenP Love it! Also just got your #1001bookswap package today. Thanks! I‘m actually on my way to Starbucks so the gift card will be handy 😊 6y
vivastory @JenP Enjoy! Once you finish the book, message me on Goodreads. I'd like to know your thoughts. 6y
Liz_M @saresmoore 😢 😢 😢 I was on vacation and without Internet and missed the entire nyrb sale! I will have to console myself by finding a half dozen nyrb titles at Stand that are below cover price. 6y
81 likes16 comments
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AnneCecilie
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Book not in the database, but here‘s number 3

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Lindy
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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We have an 11 hour layover in Toronto on our way to Ireland, so we went to the Dior exhibit at the museum. You may be wondering what these buttons that we saw have to do with books, but I find literary connections everywhere I go. The buttons were made in Paris in 1950 by François-Victor Hugo, a descendant of Victor Hugo.

Miss_Kim That‘s so cool! 💕📖💕 6y
AmyG Beautiful 6y
saresmoore Great connection! 6y
LeahBergen That‘s so cool! 6y
batsy Very cool! They're so pretty. 6y
51 likes5 comments
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WanderingBookaneer
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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My first Stein

Valeka That‘s on my TBR for March! 6y
Shortstack Let me know what you think of this one when you're done. 6y
Velvetfur Ooohhh I've always been curious about her work! Looking forward to your review and thoughts along the way 👍 6y
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monalyisha
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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Just read these words by happenstance. New life motto. 💃🏼

mcipher Is that you? Those shoes with that dress!! ❤️❤️❤️ 6y
monalyisha @mcipher It is! They were my reception shoes. I bedazzled the toes myself. 😉🤓 Sneakers for the dancing portion = one of the best choices I‘ve ever made. 🙌🏻 Plus, are Converse *ever* the wrong fashion choice? (edited) 6y
Jess_Read_This Omigosh. I love this quote. So much #Truth. And I love your dancing pic!!! 6y
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Morr_Books Lovely! 6y
ElleSkel I love this pic so much!! 6y
mcipher Converse are always the right choice for sure!! 6y
77 likes6 comments
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writerlibrarian
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Buttons. Knitted reading gloves. 📚 a perfect match. #knitting

Nat_Reads SO CUTE 7y
Nat_Reads @Cca0601 You could make these! For people in northern climes LOL 7y
writerlibrarian @Nat_Reads Thank you. I used the broken rib stitch. One of my favourite. 😁 7y
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julesG 👏👏👏👏 Yeah for #knittersoflitsy 7y
JacqMac ❤️ 7y
blithebuoyant AHHH is there a pattern for this? 6y
35 likes6 comments
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utterKATEness
Tender Buttons | Gertrude Stein
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"Here you see I was wise enough not to hesitate and still I dominated" -Stein "There's the t-shirt." -Professor #ThingsMyProfessorSays