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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Resultados 1-5 de 62
... Review manuscript files at Yale, to the Houghton Library at Harvard, and to Kate Donahue and the University of Minnesota. Langdon Hammer advised the dissertation from which this book hatched and offered as much help as any student could ...
... Review and Yale Review. Part of chapter 4 appeared in PN Review. Manuscripts uncovered in the course of my work have appeared in the New York Review of Books, Thumbscrew, and the Yale Review. I am grateful to the relevant editors ...
... reviews. This book aims to illuminate a Jarrell more ambitious, more complex, and more important than that. He is ambitious partly because his writings refuse certain public ambitions. He is complex in part because his verse style tries ...
... on the other. Alan Williamson has already found just such choices at the core of Jarrell's work.7 Some of Jarrell's best interpreters were his contemporaries. Reviews, letters, and the occasional poem by Lowell, Bishop, Karl.
Stephanie Burt. Reviews, letters, and the occasional poem by Lowell, Bishop, Karl Shapiro, Delmore Schwartz, and others who knew Jarrell personally have been consistently helpful, as has Mary von Schrader Jarrell, in person and through ...
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 | |