A History of Modern Poetry, Volume II: Modernism and After
There have been many books on early modernist poetry, not so many on its various sequels, and still fewer on the currents and cross-currents of poetry since World War II. Until now there has been no single comprehensive history of British and American poetry throughout the half century from the mid-1920s to the recent past. This David Perkins is uniquely equipped to provid
...morePaperback
Published
October 15th 1989
by Belknap Press
(first published 1987)
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As good as volume I, but not as interesting for the most part. That's probably just because I didn't know as much about the poetry covered in volume I, combined with the fact that most of the stuff covered in the last 180 pages of this one is guff. Perkins is rightly sceptical about much later twentieth century American poetry, and even when he praises he notes that there are huge problems - Ashbery, he admits, it boring; taking dictation from Ouija boards is, shall we say, not a great way to pr...more
David Perkins' exhaustive and sprawling account beginning with the High Modernists of the 1920s and culminating with a study of James Merrill's epic "The Changing Light at Sandover" some sixty years later provides a complete and highly engaging overview of English language poetry in the 20th century. The placing of works in context with one another, with biographical information regarding the authors, and with the prevailing literary movements of the time enhances the both the underst...more
Kinda sexy.
While its a bit stuffy for my tastes, the sheer volume of poetic history (however shaded, but its attempts to include those from all ethnicities, classes, modes, is impressive). Sometimes, one just has to delve into these things and enter poetic theory for the hell of it. While you may not agree in approaching the writing of poetry this way, its interesting nonetheless.
Its easy to read for the most part. In some places, my eyes glazed over. But hold out for pre...more
While its a bit stuffy for my tastes, the sheer volume of poetic history (however shaded, but its attempts to include those from all ethnicities, classes, modes, is impressive). Sometimes, one just has to delve into these things and enter poetic theory for the hell of it. While you may not agree in approaching the writing of poetry this way, its interesting nonetheless.
Its easy to read for the most part. In some places, my eyes glazed over. But hold out for pre...more
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Too often, in poetry criticism, they just can't get passed TS Eliot or Whitman. But this edition covers all the major and minor poets. I'm jotting down many names to check-out books from the library because of this one!
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