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Imagism
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Imagism

Movement in Anglo-American poetry that flourished from 1912 to 1914 and affected much US and British poetry and critical thinking thereafter. A central figure was Ezra Pound, who asserted the principles of free verse, complex imagery, and poetic impersonality.

Pound encouraged Hilda Doolittle to sign her verse H D Imagiste and in 1914 edited the Des Imagistes anthology. Poets subsequently influenced by this movement include T S Eliot, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, and Marianne Moore. Imagism established modernism in English-language verse.



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Hauge, described by Bly as having "lived in a gift-giving, pre-communal society," enacts, in short, imagistically precise, extremely powerful poems, the wintry solitude that we associate with Scandinavia, a powerful humanism emerging as a sheer act of will from the harsh landscape and climate.
of the sacrificed daughter in Marlowe and Shakespeare, for a late sixteenth-century audience, would have been imagistically associated with [Queen] Elizabeth, the perennial daughter" (19).
Just as important psychologically and imagistically, the representation of this child-woman (at once a little girl in her nightie and a fully developed sexual being who should perhaps be more discreet in covering herself up) sharing the front seat of the car with her father
 
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