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American literature --- Pound, Ezra, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street
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A loving and admiring companion for half a century to literary titan Ezra Pound, concert violinist Olga Rudge was the muse who inspired the poet to complete his epic poem, The Cantos, and the mother of his only daughter, Mary. Strong-minded and defiant of conventions, Rudge knew the best and worst of times with Pound. With him, she coped with the wrenching dislocations brought about by two catastrophic world wars and experienced modernism's radical transformation of the arts. In this enlightening biography, Anne Conover offers a full portrait of Olga Rudge (1895-1996), drawing for the first time on Rudge's extensive unpublished personal notebooks and correspondence. Conover explores Rudge's relationship with Pound, her influence on his life and career, and her perspective on many details of his controversial life, as well as her own musical career as a violinist and musicologist and a key figure in the revival of Vivaldi's music in the 1930's. In addition to mining documentary sources, the author interviewed Rudge and family members and friends. The result is a vivid account of a highly intelligent and talented woman and the controversial poet whose flame she tended to the end of her long life. The book "es extensively from the Rudge-Pound letters--an almost daily correspondence that began in the 1920's and continued until Pound's death in 1972. These letters shed light on many aspects of Pound's disturbing personality; the complicated and delicate balance he maintained between the two most significant women in his life, Olga and his wife Dorothy, for fifty years; the birth of Olga and Ezra's daughter Mary de Rachewiltz; Pound's alleged anti-Semitism and Fascist sympathies; his wartime broadcasts over Rome radio and indictment for treason; and his twelve-year incarceration in St. Elizabeth's Hospital for the mentally ill.
Violinists --- Rudge, Olga, --- Pound, Ezra, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- Relations with women. --- Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street
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Traces the lyricism and musicality in Pound's early verse through to his radical Modernist style.
Pound, Ezra, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- LITERARY CRITICISM / Poetry. --- Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street
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In 1938, American poet Ezra Pound published Guide to Kulchur, a book so radically different from his earlier writing that readers might not have believed that it was written by the same firebrand aesthetician who had advocated in 1913 that poets go in fear of abstractions. But Guide to Kulchur was only the latest example of a new kind of prose that Pound had been writing-fiercely invested in politics and the mobilization of cultural heritage to its service. Pound's new modernism came as a direct effect of his investment in fascism. Since the last monographic treatment of Pound's fascism, scholars of literature, history, art history, urban design, and music have uncovered important aspects of the fascist regime's use of culture to foment Italian national identity. These studies reveal the cultural, mythical, rhetorical, and intellectual aspects of that regime-more than enough new knowledge to require a reappraisal of perhaps the most famous, certainly the most notorious, American in Italy in that era, and perhaps the entire twentieth century. Unlike previous discussions of Pound's adoption of Italian fascism, which focus mostly on his political and economic interests, this book reveals the importance of the cultural projects of Mussolini's fascist regime. By bringing Italian primary sources and new approaches to the cultural project of Mussolini's regime to bear on Pound's prose work (including unpublished material from the Pound Papers and untranslated periodical contributions), Paul shows how Pound's modernism changed as a result of involvement in Italian politics and culture. At the same time, it uses the familiar figure of Pound to provide an entry for scholars of Anglo-American modernism into the diverse and complex realm of Italian modernism.
Pound, Ezra, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street --- Modernism --- Fascism --- Italy --- Pound
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This book develops key advances in Pound studies, responding to newly available primary sources and recent methodological developments in associated fields. It is divided into three parts. Part I addresses the state of Pound's texts, both those upon which he relied for source material and those he produced in manuscript and print. Part II provides a comprehensive overview of the relation between Pound's poetry and translations and scholarship in East Asian studies. Part III examines the radical reconception of Pound's cultural and political activities throughout his career, and his continuing impact, a re-assessment made possible by recent controversial scholarship as well as new directions in literary and cultural theory. Pound's wide-ranging intellectual, cultural, and aesthetic interests are given new analytic treatment, with an emphasis on how recent developments in gender and sexuality studies, medieval historiography, textual genetics, sound studies, visual cultures, and other fields can develop an understanding of Pound's poetry and prose.
Pound, Ezra, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street
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Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra. --- Pound, Ezra, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street
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Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra, --- Biography --- Political and social views --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street --- Biography. --- Political and social views.
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Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra, --- Aesthetics --- Modernism (Literature) --- -Poetics --- -Poetry --- History --- -Technique --- -Aesthetics --- Poetics --- Aesthetics. --- -History --- -Pound, Ezra --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street
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Pound, Ezra --- -Bibliography --- Pound, Ezra, --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- Bibliography. --- Pound (Ezra). Bibliographie. --- Pound (Ezra). Bibliografie. --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street
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In this revisionary study of Ezra Pound's poetics, Scott Hamilton exposes the extent of the modernist poet's debt to the French romantic and symbolist traditions. Whereas previous critics have focused on a single influence, Hamilton explores a broad spectrum of French poets, including Thophile Gautier, Tristan Corbire, Jules Laforgue, Remy de Gourmont, Henri de Rgnier, Jules Romains, Laurent Tailhade, Paul Verlaine, and Stphane Mallarm. This exploration of Pound's canon demonstrates his logic in borrowing from the French tradition as well as a paradoxical circularity to his poetic development. Hamilton begins by explaining how Pound read Gautier's poetry as an example of Parnassianism and of the "satirical realism" of Flaubert and the modern novelistic tradition. He reveals, however, a crucial blind spot in Pound's poetic vision that facilitated his return to precisely those romantic and proto-symbolist elements in Gautier that were celebrated by Baudelaire and Mallarm, and that Pound, as a modern poet, felt obliged to repress. Arguing that Pound's response to symbolism was not specifically modernist, Hamilton shows how his dual attraction to the lyric and prose traditions, to symbolism and realism, and to the visionary and the historical helps us better to understand our own post-modern sensibility.Originally published in 1992.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Symbolism (Literary movement) --- French poetry --- History and criticism. --- Pound, Ezra, --- Knowledge --- Literature. --- Pound, Ezra Loomis, --- Atheling, William, --- Bawnd, Izrā, --- Paount, Ezra, --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra, --- Pavnd, Ezra, --- E. P. --- P., E. --- T. J. V., --- V., T. J., --- Pangde, --- Poet of Titchfield Street, --- History and criticism --- Pound, Ezra Loomis --- Literature --- France --- 19th century --- 20th century --- Pound, Ezra --- Atheling, William --- Bawnd, Izrā --- Paount, Ezra --- Pʻaundŭ, Ejŭra --- Pavnd, Ezra --- T. J. V. --- V., T. J. --- Pangde --- Poet of Titchfield Street
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