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Literature Criticism
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From: The American Poetry Review[(essay date 1993) In the following essay, Hatlen suggests Oppen's poem "Technologies" is a response to Denise Levertov's "Who Is at My Window."] In 1958 George Oppen returned to New York City determined to resume the...
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From: Bucknell Review[(essay date 1980) In the following essay, Hatlen offers a Marxist reading of The Merchant of Venice, maintaining that the playwright questioned both feudal and bourgeois concepts of value.] Twentieth-century...
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From: Contemporary PoetsThe total quantity of Tony Hoagland's poetry is relatively small. Three slim chapbooks were incorporated in large part into the full-length book Sweet Ruin, selected by Donald Justice as the 1992 winner of the...
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From: World, Self, Poem: Essays on Contemporary Poetry from the 'Jubilation of Poets,'[(essay date 1990) In the following essay, Hatlen explores Duncan's association with Kenneth Rexroth and Allen Ginsberg and details how Duncan's poetry differed from theirs.] Robert Duncan, more consciously and more...
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From: Paideuma[(essay date spring, fall, and winter 2003) In the following essay, Hatlen discusses the influence of the poets H. D., Ezra Pound, and Wallace Stevens on Williams during the years 1913-1917, and Williams's ultimate...
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From: Contemporary Literature[(essay date summer 1984) In the following essay, Hatlen focuses on the opposition between aesthetics and politics in the first ten sections of "A," arguing that the poem serves as a socialist response to the fascism of...
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From: Sagetrieb[(essay date 1996) In the following essay, Hatlen examines the ways in which Enslin and Dorn have relied upon the work of Olson; however, Hatlen contends, they “have not only defined distinctive spaces of their own … but...
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From: Twentieth-Century Literature[(essay date Fall 1988) In the following essay, Hatlen reconsiders Death of a Man from a feminist perspective in an attempt to explain why the novel has been misinterpreted as Pro-Nazi.] When Kay Boyle's Death of a Man...
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From: Twentieth-Century Literature[(essay date Fall 1988) In the following essay, Hatlen reconsiders Death of a Man from a feminist perspective in an attempt to explain why the novel has been misinterpreted as Pro-Nazi.] When Kay Boyle's Death of a Man...
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From: George Oppen: Man and Poet[(essay date 1973) In the following essay, originally published in 1973, Davie considers Oppen's poems on their own merit rather than as representative of a particular movement or tradition.] For us to come to terms...
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From: George Oppen, Man and Poet[(essay date 1973) In the following essay, Davie discusses some aspects of style that make Oppen's works stand out in American literature.] For us to come to terms with Oppen, the time has long gone by--if it ever...