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Literature Criticism
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From:Philological Quarterly (Vol. 92, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIn March 1941, on the eve of the outbreak of Pacific War, Ezra Pound wrote to his friend, the Japanese poet and critic Kitasono Katsue, proposing that the United States concede Japan the island of Guam, object of...
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From:Nexos: Sociedad, Ciencia, Literatura (Vol. 43, Issue 505) Peer-ReviewedEn 1949, cuando el poeta estadunidense Ezra Pound fue reconocido con el Premio Bollingen por los polémicos Cantares de Pisa, se encontraba recluido en el hospital psiquiátrico de St. Elizabeth. A pesar de estar purgando...
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From:Journal of Modern Literature (Vol. 45, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe New Ezra Pound Studies, exploring the latest developments in Pound scholarship, makes use of recently discovered primary texts and new methodological approaches in associated fields from gender studies to medieval...
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From:The Literature of Propaganda (Vol. 2: Groups. )Ezra Pound The Cantos, a multivolume work of lyric poetry published in several installments between 1925 and 1969, is widely regarded as the magnum opus of American poet Ezra Pound. The poems take up a sweeping variety...
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From:Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature (Vol. 73, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTHE RELIGIOUS BELIEFS of Ezra Pound have long provoked curiosity and controversy. In the January 1928 issue of The Dial, T. S. Eliot famously ended his review of Personae: The Collected Poems of Ezra Pound (1926) with a...
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From:Mosaic: A journal for the interdisciplinary study of literature (Vol. 42, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn the summer of 1952, Barbara Holdridge and Marianne Mantell visited St. Elizabeths Hospital in order to persuade Ezra Pound to make a spoken-word LP for their record company. Founded in March of that year, Caedmon...
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From:Journal of Modern Literature (Vol. 34, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAlthough the nature of Ezra Pound's Fascism has generated substantial critical study, the mechanics of his actual engagement in the cultural projects of the Mussolini regime has received less attention. Using as its...
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From:Philological Quarterly (Vol. 85, Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedEzra Pound's initial understanding of Japan clearly involves Ernest Fenollosa's papers, and Pound's encounter with Fenollosa's work is well known. (1) He met Fenollosa's widow, Mary, in London in 1912; she asked him to...
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From:Papers on Language & Literature (Vol. 48, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe importance of Noh drama to Ezra Pound's poetry, and especially to his Cantos, has long been acknowledged and has previously been approached from a variety of perspectives: focusing on the sources and accuracy of the...
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From:TLS. Times Literary Supplement (Issue 5864-5865)Sir,--Omar Pound and I were colleagues in the late 1960s and early 1970s at the Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology (see Letters, August 14). We had many conversations and some of these included "his father"...
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From:Italica (Vol. 91, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIn October 1958, James Laughlin and Vanni Scheiwiller published in Verona, Italy, a limited edition (two hundred numbered copies) of Ezra Pound's Diptych Rome-London: the book was distributed in the United Kingdom by...
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From:Notes and Queries (Vol. 41, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedHarriet Monroe, as editor of Poetry, printed a letter of Ezra Pound's in the Oct 1935 issue of the magazine in which Pound voiced his displeasure with Horace Gregory's review of his work. Pound focussed on one sentence...
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From:The Manifesto in Literature (Vol. 2: The Modernist Movement: 1900-WWII. )Ezra Pound First published on January 13, 1921, in the socialist periodical the New Age, Ezra Pound's “Axiomata” laid out his stance toward religion and spirituality in a confident and defiant way. His propositions...
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From:The Hemingway Review (Vol. 30, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedErnest Hemingway and Ezra Pound shared a background in and an enthusiasm for the "Agassiz method" of scientific observation. Hemingway had been a member of the Agassiz Society from the age of four. Pound, for his part,...
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From:Journal of Modern Literature (Vol. 39, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThere is some confusion evident in biographies concerning Ezra Pound's movements at the time of his eightieth birthday, on 30 October 1965. A little-known source from Greece establishes the dates of the week that Pound...
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From:TLS. Times Literary Supplement (Issue 5866)Sir,--Henry Merritt (Letters, August 21 & 28) writes that he was given to understand by Omar Pound that "relations with the Italian family were inimical", and that "No one from the Italian family had let him know that...
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From:Textual Cultures (Vol. 12, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedBILLINGS, Timothy, ed. 2019. Ezra Pound, Cathay: A Critical Edition. New York: Fordham University Press. Pp. xvii + 364. ISBN 9780823281060, Hardback $34.95. In April 1915, at 29 years old, Ezra Pound published Cathay,...
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From:South Atlantic Review (Vol. 80, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedLe Paradis n'est pas artificiel/but spezzato apparently/it exists only in fragments unexpected excellent sausage,/the smell of mint, for example ... --Ezra Pound, Canto LXXIV In 1945, Ezra Pound began the Pisan...
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From:Forum for World Literature Studies (Vol. 1, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe exemplary poem of Ezra Pound's imagism--"In a Station of the Metro"--is embodied with his environmental concern. The writing background, his then emotion and the status quo in a station of the metro at that time in...
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From:TLS. Times Literary Supplement (Issue 5861)TLS December 9, 2011 Damn belfry We look back to a review by Clive Wilmer of Ezra Pound to His Parents edited by Mary de Rachewiltz, A. David Moody and Joanna Moody. To read the piece in full, go to www.the-tls.co.uk...