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Literary Essays of Ezra Pound

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ISBN-10: 0811201570

ISBN-13: 9780811201575

Edition: 2007 (Reprint)

Authors: Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot

List price: $25.95
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Description:

For this definitive collection of Pound's Literary Essays, his friend (and English editor) T. S. Eliot chose material from five earlier volumes: Pavannes and Divisions (1918), Instigations (1920), How to Read (1931), Make It New (1934), and Polite Essays (1937). 33 pieces are arranged in three groups: "The Art of Poetry," "The Tradition," and "Contemporaries." Eliot wrote in his introduction: "I hope that this volume will demonstrate that Pound's literary criticism is the most important contemporary criticism of its kind . . perhaps the kind we can least afford to do without . . . the refreshment, the revitalization and 'making new' of literature in our time."
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Book details

List price: $25.95
Copyright year: 2007
Publisher: New Directions Publishing Corporation
Publication date: 1/17/1968
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 484
Size: 5.20" wide x 8.00" long x 1.20" tall
Weight: 0.946
Language: English

With T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound was one of the two main influences on British and U.S. poetry between the two world wars. The collection of his Letters, 1907--1941 revealed the great erudition of this most controversial expatriate poet. Born in Idaho in 1885, Pound graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and went abroad to live in 1908. His first book, A Lume Spento, a small collection of poems, was published in Venice in 1908. With the publication of Personae in London in 1909, he became the leader of the imagists abroad. Pound's writings have been subject to many foreign influences. First he imitated the troubadours; then he came under the influence of the Chinese and Japanese poets.…