Vendor | |
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Edward Everett Root
John Spiers |
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Original language | |
English | |
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Ezra Pound's Green World
Walter Baumann Caterina Ricciardi
Nature, Landscape and Language
Contents:
Walter Baumann, Ezra Pound and Trees;
Stoddard Martin, Sacred Landscape: Lago di Garda in the Work of Ezra Pound and D. H. Lawrence;
William Pratt, The Grasshopper and the Ant: Pound’s Versions of Pastoral;
John Gery, What are Temples for: Spontaneity, Simultaneity and Fortuna in Canto 97;
Gerd Schmidt, “Sumerian” Hieroglyphs in Cantos 94,
97 and 100;
Massimo Bacigalupo, The Green World in the Autobiographical Myth of The Cantos;
Stephen Romer, “The fine thing held in the mind”: Painterliness Emanating in Pound’s Early Poems and Cantos;
Mick Sheldon, Allen Upward’s Influence on Ezra Pound’s
Green World;
Jo Brantley Berryman, Pound’s Green World: Mimesis, Metaphor, and Magic;
Rosella Mamoli Zorzi, The Myth of Daphne in Pound’s Early Poetry; Peter Liebregts, “Damned to you Midas, Midas lacking a Pan”: Ezra Pound and the Use of Pan;
Charles Altieri, Taking Fascist Ontology Seriously: Why “the Green World” Could Not Suffice for the Early Cantos;
Giuliana Ferreccio, Pound’s Iconic Acts: Rituals and Natural Language in the Early-Middle Cantos;
Jonathan Pollock, The Poetics of Cut and Flow in The Cantos of Ezra
Pound;
Sean Mark, “Two larks in contrappunto / at sunset”: Pound and Pasolini After the Fall;
Andy Trevathan, Teaching Pound in a Red State;
Viorica Patea, Patrizia de Rachewiltz’s My Taishan: Confessions in the Pound Tradition;
John Gery, “Independence in a Green World”: Mary de Rachewiltz as Student and Teacher.