Despite the bold incipit of Guy Davenport’s 1969 introduction to his work—“Jonathan Williams, poet”—Williams (1928-2008) has always been as well known for his other activities as for his poetry: as the founder of the independent American press Jargon Books, as the publisher and advocate of a wide range of experimental poets including Charles Olson, Mina Loy and Lorine Niedecker, as a collector of quotations, a photographer, a writer on photography and folk art. His poetry is distinguished fro..
Part of an address during the dedication of the Ernest S. Bird Library at Syracuse University, Georg...
The beginnings of American poet’s theater coalesced in the period immediately following WWII, when r...
This is a limited edition chapbook. The collaboration took the innovative form of all three individu...
[para. 1]: "For more than fifty years Jonathan Williams published from his home in North Carolina an...
The book is a festschrift, honoring the work and spirit of Williams. Divided into four sections, “Re...
The case of Karl Jay Shapiro\u27s poetry is a quixotic one. Practically no criticism of his poetry h...
Randall Jarrell (1914–1965) was the most influential poetry critic of his generation. He was also a ...
The discovery of Gerard Manley Hopkins\u27s poetry in the twentieth century was a revelation for pos...
Jared Carter has published three books of poetry with the Cleveland State University Poetry Center, ...
The writing of Frank O’Hara, including his abstract epic, “Second Avenue,” emerged from a period of ...
Edited by David E. Roessel and Nicholas Rand Moschovakis New Directions (Hardcover, $29.95, ISBN: 08...
When Williams decided in the early forties to accelerate work on the magnum opus he had begun fift...
Two poems — Sea-Shells, Wanderlust by Dorothy Hewett Poetry from The Conversations at Curlow Creek b...
Moderated by H.L. Hix. Includes poems and commentary by College at Brockport emeritus and alumnus Wi...
Miłosz’s later poetry attempts to overcome the (post)modernist gap between the author as a textual e...
Part of an address during the dedication of the Ernest S. Bird Library at Syracuse University, Georg...
The beginnings of American poet’s theater coalesced in the period immediately following WWII, when r...
This is a limited edition chapbook. The collaboration took the innovative form of all three individu...
[para. 1]: "For more than fifty years Jonathan Williams published from his home in North Carolina an...
The book is a festschrift, honoring the work and spirit of Williams. Divided into four sections, “Re...
The case of Karl Jay Shapiro\u27s poetry is a quixotic one. Practically no criticism of his poetry h...
Randall Jarrell (1914–1965) was the most influential poetry critic of his generation. He was also a ...
The discovery of Gerard Manley Hopkins\u27s poetry in the twentieth century was a revelation for pos...
Jared Carter has published three books of poetry with the Cleveland State University Poetry Center, ...
The writing of Frank O’Hara, including his abstract epic, “Second Avenue,” emerged from a period of ...
Edited by David E. Roessel and Nicholas Rand Moschovakis New Directions (Hardcover, $29.95, ISBN: 08...
When Williams decided in the early forties to accelerate work on the magnum opus he had begun fift...
Two poems — Sea-Shells, Wanderlust by Dorothy Hewett Poetry from The Conversations at Curlow Creek b...
Moderated by H.L. Hix. Includes poems and commentary by College at Brockport emeritus and alumnus Wi...
Miłosz’s later poetry attempts to overcome the (post)modernist gap between the author as a textual e...
Part of an address during the dedication of the Ernest S. Bird Library at Syracuse University, Georg...
The beginnings of American poet’s theater coalesced in the period immediately following WWII, when r...
This is a limited edition chapbook. The collaboration took the innovative form of all three individu...