David Avidan was himself a Futureman, a self-described "Galactic Poet"
and radical individualist known for his innovative use of Hebrew both on
the page and in his performances and films. Recognized by the New York
Times as one of the poets that "helped the biblical tongue evolve into
a modern, living language," Avidan played in his work with lexical and
syntactical innovations, neologisms, various registers of Hebrew
throughout its history, and colloquial speech, which he believed
deserved its place in poetry. Ever the innovator, in 1974 he even
conducted a poetic dialogue with a computer. Futureman, in Tsipi
Keller's virtuosic translation, introduces selections from across
Avidan's groundbreaking oeuvre to English-language readers for the first
time. Scholar Anat Weisman, in her illuminating introduction "David
Avidan: The Sadosemantic Poet," provides the literary, social, and
cultural background to Avidan's work.