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Frost/Stevens: Whose Era Was It Anyway?

AXELROD, STEVEN GOULD

The Wallace Stevens journal, 2017-04, Vol.41 (1), p.4-9 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press

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  • Título:
    Frost/Stevens: Whose Era Was It Anyway?
  • Autor: AXELROD, STEVEN GOULD
  • Assuntos: Eliot, T S (Thomas Stearns) (1888-1965) ; Frost, Robert (1874-1963) ; Jarrell, Randall (1914-1965) ; Pound, Ezra (1885-1972) ; Richardson, Mark ; Stein, Gertrude (1874-1946) ; Stevens, Wallace (1879-1955) ; Trilling, Lionel (1905-1975)
  • É parte de: The Wallace Stevens journal, 2017-04, Vol.41 (1), p.4-9
  • Descrição: IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY, literary historians sometimes liked to name periods after male authors, as seen in John Dennis' The Age of Pope (1899), Algernon Charles Swinburne's The Age of Shakespeare (1908), and A. W. Ward and A. R. Waller's The Age of Dryden (1912). [...]writing in his influential introduction to The Oxford Book of American Verse (1950), Matthiessen generously permitted Frost to share honors with Eliot: "When the history of American poetry in our time comes to be written, its central figures will probably be Frost and Eliot." According to Matthiessen, Frost stood for "the older America" whereas Eliot evoked "metropolitan" modernity (xxx). Partisan Review Online, Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center, hgar-srv3.bu.edu/collections/partisan-review/search/ detail?id=326032.
  • Editor: Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Idioma: Inglês

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