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Imagism |
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ImagismMovement 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. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| Vietnamese poetry has less "connective tissue than English"; like most Vietnamese poetry, Lam Thi's "tends to be end-stopped and imagistically contained. While Key's battle, if "perilous," remains imagistically bloodless, Yancey counters the musical tradition that the earlier composition generated even as she borrows it: through "the price [of] blood," her speaker claims a personal investment in her precursors' struggle and the flag's symbolic "glory," but in strongly racialized terms. ``If you're thinking imagistically, the chances of you being happy with somebody else taking that are going to be slim,'' Howard says. |
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