Why this word is great
OBJECTISM — [Noun] A poetic approach treating the poet as merely one object among many in existence, rather than a privileged subject mediating reality. From object ("a material thing") + -ism ("doctrine or principle"), coined by the poet Charles Olson. Unlike "objectivism" (Ayn Rand's philosophy of rigid individualism) or "subjectivism" (the tyranny of personal perspective), objectism dissolves the poet into the world, making them no more privileged than a stone, a river, or the slant of afternoon light. It is the weight of a typewriter key pressing into paper, the way a window frame divides the sky without claiming it, or the silence of a chair in an empty room—an insistence that meaning is not made, but found, already whole, in the quiet democracy of things.