Niatum, DuaneLocke, DuaneWolven, FredParameswaran, D.Matteson, FredricDorman, SonyaHill, JeanneBurgis, AllanEakins, PatriciaBritt, AlanBehm, RichardSorrells, HelenWyatt, CharlesArrabal, FernandoSayres, WilliamFarinella, SalvatoreRaba, GyorgyStilwell, RobertTibbs, BenRussell, Norman H.Wade, DavidJoy, MichaelHayes, CharlesMacQueen, JamesMcDonald, BarryCollier, Richard I.Roth, PaulLocke, DuaneMeats, Stephen, Assistant2018-12-182018-12-181975http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11868/611Ut wants the immanentist poem. This poem is oriented towards the word, linguistic reality, not the thing, the materialistic illusion. Through the word, the mystic word, the thing becomes a reality, a reality of consciousness, the only knowable reality. The thing is the beginning of the word and consciousness, but it is not a separable and external entity if it is to be humanly meaningful. Without the thing, as in conceptions, there is only the unreal word. The mystic word is the thing, the word, and the self as a consciousness, not an ego, fused into an experiential reality.UT Review: A Continuing Anthology of Immanentist and Other Poetries. UT Review was published from 1972-1982. It was preceded by Poetry Review, published 1964-1971, and succeeded by Abatis, published 1972-1982, and Tampa Review published 1988-present.en-USAmerican poetry -- 20th century -- PeriodicalsUT Review (1975) Vol.3 No.4UT ReviewUT Review: A Continuing Anthology of PoetryBook