The Wesleyan Tradition: Four Decades of American Poetry

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Michael Collier
Wesleyan University Press, 1994 M01 28 - 316 páginas

A compelling anthology of the best poetry of a unique press.

Since issuing its first volumes in 1959, the Wesleyan poetry program has challenged the reigning aesthetic of the time and profoundly influenced the development of American poetry. One of the country's oldest programs, its greatest achievement has been the publication of early works by yet undiscovered poetry who have since become major awarded Pulitzer and Bollingen prizes, National Book Awards, and many other honors. At a time when other programs are being phased out, Wesleyan takes this opportunity to celebrate its distinguished history and reaffirm its commitment to poetry with publication of The Wesleyan Tradition.

Drawing from some 250 volumes, editor Michael Collier documents the wide-ranging impact of these works. In his introduction, he describes the literary and cultural context of American poetics in more recent decades, tracing the evolution of the Deep Image and Confessional movements of the 50s and 60s, and exploring the emergence of the "prose lyric" style. Although the success of the Wesleyan program has inspired its share of imitators, no other program has had such a fundamental impact. Works by the eighty-six poets included her both document and celebrate that contribution.

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Hyam Plutzik
5
James Wright
14
David Ferry
25
Robert Bagg
35
Robert
49
Richard Howard
65
Turner Cassity
73
Harvey Shapiro
80
Lloyd Schwartz
159
Rachel Hadas
167
For Want of a Male a Shoe Was Lost
173
Jeffrey Skinner
181
Thulani Davis
187
Olga Broumas and Jane Miller
194
Don Bogen
202
Robert Morgan
214

Marge Piercy
93
James Seay
107
William Harmon
117
Russell Edson
123
Greenberg
131
Sherley Williams
133
Ellen Bryant Voigt
143
Anne Hussey
149
Lawrence Kearney
153
Jordan Smith
220
Bin Ramke
227
Maria Flook
235
Mark Jarman
242
Pamela Alexander
251
Boyer Rickel
257
Copyrights
271
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MICHAEL COLLIER has won several awards and fellowships for his poetry, a "Discovery" / The Nation award (1981), the 1988 Alice Fay Di Castagnola Award from the Poetry Society of America, a Thomas J. Watson fellowship, a fellowship at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, and an NEA creative writing fellowship. A graduate of Connecticut College (B.A. 1976) and the University of Arizona (M.F.A. 1979), Collier has traveled widely—from London to northern Africa to Siberia and Japan—and worked at various times as a house painter and a community activist. He is an assistant professor of English and associate director of creative writing at the University of Maryland and a visiting assistant professor in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University. He was director of the summer writers' conference at Johns Hopkins in 1987 and coordinator of poetry programs at the Folger Shakespeare Library in 1983-84. His first book, The Clasp and Other Poems, was published by Wesleyan in 1986.

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