Collected Poems, 1930-83

Collected Poems, 1930-83
Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 1998
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780252067679

Winner of the 1984 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize. Originally published in 1983, Miles's Collected Poems received seven awards, including the Lenore Marshall/Nation Poetry Prize, and was one of three finalists for the 1983 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. A striking consistency -- of tone, of diction, of purpose -- characterizes Miles's life work. It has been a life well spent. --Publisher's Weekly. Miles is a poet of the first rank whose work might well be compared to that of Williams or Moore ... Collected Poems is a treasury of poetic wit and human understanding that belongs in all poetry collections. --Library Journal. Miles's work is one of the finest and most solid bodies of poetry to be found in this country. --A.R. Ammons.

The Course of English Surrealist Poetry Since the 1930s

The Course of English Surrealist Poetry Since the 1930s
Author: Rob Jackaman
Publisher: Edwin Mellen Press
Total Pages: 344
Release: 1989
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780889469327

This study proposes that there has been a revival of surrealist poetry, and traces an uninterrupted thread of development in surrealism throughout 20th-century English poetry.

Articulate Flesh

Articulate Flesh
Author: Gregory Woods
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 1987-01-01
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780300047523

Arguing that homosexual poetry is part of the mainstream of poetic writing--not a distinct and differentiated category within it--Gregory Woods provides a fastidious study of homosexual poetry in the twentieth century that emphasizes the homo-erotic themes in the works of D.H. Lawrence, Hart Crane, W.H. Auden, Allen Ginsberg, and Thom Gunn. Woods's controlled and elegant study demonstrates that a critic who ignores the sexual orientation of a poet, particularly a love poet, risks overlooking the significance of the poetry itself.

Twentieth Century Poetry: American and British (1900-1970)

Twentieth Century Poetry: American and British (1900-1970)
Author: John Malcolm Brinnin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 550
Release: 1970
Genre: Poetry
ISBN:

"This collection is weighted on the side of pleasure--the pleasure of first encounter, the pleasure of old acquaintance, the pleasure of poems that speak with ... particularly human resonance."--Preface.

Writers Directory

Writers Directory
Author: NA NA
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 1555
Release: 2016-03-05
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1349036501

The Poetry of Robert Frost

The Poetry of Robert Frost
Author: Robert Frost
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 654
Release: 1979
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780805005028

A complete collection of Robert Frost's poetry.

Mirror of Minds

Mirror of Minds
Author: Geoffrey Bullough
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 364
Release: 1962-12-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1442651075

The aim of the author, who has long been interested in the history of ideas, has been to give some illustrations of the ways in which at various periods English poetry has reflected current views of the human mind, with special reference to such topics as its place in the cosmos, its relations with the body, the connections between sense, passions, and reason, the problem of soul and its possible survival after death. The subject matter is important, for many of the more self-conscious writers have been profoundly affected by their assumptions about the senses and passions, the reason and the imagination. The author traces four main historical phases in each of which different aspects and potentialities of the mind have been stressed. Chapter I discusses the microcosmic conception of man inherited from the Middle Ages and traces its influence in some allegorical and didactic verse, lyric and epic. Chapter II considers the development of Shakespeare’s attitude to the mind and human character. Chapter III turns to some effects (between Dryden and Wordsworth) of the seventeenth-century revolution in philosophy and science, including the search for clarity and order, the Augustan interest in reason and the passions, and the rise of the association of psychology. Chapter IV shows how the Romantic poets made use of associations and intuitions, and discusses the Victorian poets’ hopes and fears about immortality in relation to the advance of science. The last chapter traces the influence of the philosophy of the “moment” from the aesthetes to T.S. Eliot, and distinguishes the effects of some twentieth-century psychologies in modern poetry. Poets, of course, have rarely been systematic philosophers or psychologists; they have usually picked out and applied imaginatively only a few notions from contemporary thought. Consequently this study does not attempt to set the history of English poetry squarely against the history of philosophy. Rather, characteristic topics and writers have been selected and the discussion of them will be seen to throw light on some major imaginative preoccupations of each age. The student of English poetry and the history of ideas will find valuable comments on the major writers from Chaucer and Spenser down through Shakespeare and Milton, Dryden, Wordsworth, Shelley, Tennyson, Browning, Hardy and on a variety of modern poets such as Bridges, Eliot, Sitwell, Auden, and Graces. Alexander Lecture Series.