Randall Jarrell and His AgeColumbia University Press, 2005 M04 6 - 320 páginas Randall Jarrell (1914–1965) was the most influential poetry critic of his generation. He was also a lyric poet, comic novelist, translator, children's book author, and close friend of Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Lowell, Hannah Arendt, and many other important writers of his time. Jarrell won the 1960 National Book Award for poetry and served as poetry consultant to the Library of Congress. Amid the resurgence of interest in Randall Jarrell, Stephen Burt offers this brilliant analysis of the poet and essayist. |
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... moved in 1915 and where Owen's relatives already lived. Owen worked in Los Angeles as a photographer's assistant, and it was in Los Angeles that year that Jarrell's younger brother Charles was born.1 Soon afterwards the family moved to ...
... moving prose. He wrote, in an unpublished lecture for librarians, A shrew or a hummingbird eats half its weight in twentyfour hours; when I was a boy I read half my weight in a week. I went to school, played, did the things the grownups ...
... moving, introspective exchange ensued; one of its subjects was Amy's psychoanalysis. In 1937 Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, offered Ransom a chair and more money than Vanderbilt gave him; Tate and Jarrell led a campaign to keep him in ...
... he, Mackie and Kitten moved to New York in April 1946. Jarrell claimed to hate New York's crowds, high cost of living, statusconscious sociability, and lack of greenery, barely alleviated by a midyear move to Queens.6 He wrote (but.
... moved in 1946. Randall and Mackie and Peter and Eleanor Taylor purchased a Greensboro duplex and moved in together. Peter remembered Jarrell's “go[ing] over” his stories from this period “sentence by sentence”—he would also read ...
Contenido
Institutions Professions Criticism | |
Psychology and Psychoanalysis | |
Time and Memory | |
Childhood and Youth | |
Men Women Children Families | |
What We See and Feel and Are | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |