Please note: this work is permanently embargoed in OpenBU. No public access is forecasted for these. To request private access, please click on the lock icon and filled out the appropriate web form.Stevie Smith, born Florence Margaret Smith in 1902, was one of the most popular English poets of the Sixties, remembered for her idiosyncratic style of writing and sense of sound; distinct drawings (with which she illustrated her poems); eclectic and very learned use of literary echoes and allusions; memorable readings (and singings); and schoolgirl attire. She lived in her London suburb at 1 Avondale Road, Palmers Green, from age three until her death. Her work is included in anthologies of modern poetry, and her novels, Novel on Yellow Paper, O...
Panel on 'Hope and Despair'This paper aims at exploring the religious connections between Stevie Smi...
Stevie Smith's treatment of her two major themes of God and death reveals her seriousness as a poet;...
Critics of Stevie Smith’s work often lean on the word “flat.” Usually, the term is meant to evoke Sm...
Stevie Smith, the British poet who died in 1971, achieved renown as a writer of short, somewhat idio...
In “Stevie Smith: Collected Poems” there are themes present such as death, cruelty, religion, loneli...
The English poet, Stevie Smith, is best known for poetry which offers childlike poetic voices and ac...
The poetry of the British writer Stevie Smith has been re-edited and re-issued several times since h...
This thesis argues that Stevie Smith's poetic style can be attributed to her gender. It shows that t...
This paper aims to explore the connection between female writing and spirituality in the poetry of t...
Stevie Smith's work not only prefigures a key debate in contemporary feminism between essentialists ...
My thesis draws up a new theory of the aphorism, a form which has received limited critical treatmen...
This essay considers Stevie Smith's verbal and visual depictions of readers in her poems, novels, an...
Milton, Barrett Browning and Smith are all concerned with writing poetry that reflects on its own ma...
Stevie Smith certainly drew on Lear’s nonsense poetry, but refused to be drawn on its similarity to ...
The recent publication of 'Eye Rhymes: Sylvia Plath’s Art of the Visual' (OUP, 2007) edited by Sally...
Panel on 'Hope and Despair'This paper aims at exploring the religious connections between Stevie Smi...
Stevie Smith's treatment of her two major themes of God and death reveals her seriousness as a poet;...
Critics of Stevie Smith’s work often lean on the word “flat.” Usually, the term is meant to evoke Sm...
Stevie Smith, the British poet who died in 1971, achieved renown as a writer of short, somewhat idio...
In “Stevie Smith: Collected Poems” there are themes present such as death, cruelty, religion, loneli...
The English poet, Stevie Smith, is best known for poetry which offers childlike poetic voices and ac...
The poetry of the British writer Stevie Smith has been re-edited and re-issued several times since h...
This thesis argues that Stevie Smith's poetic style can be attributed to her gender. It shows that t...
This paper aims to explore the connection between female writing and spirituality in the poetry of t...
Stevie Smith's work not only prefigures a key debate in contemporary feminism between essentialists ...
My thesis draws up a new theory of the aphorism, a form which has received limited critical treatmen...
This essay considers Stevie Smith's verbal and visual depictions of readers in her poems, novels, an...
Milton, Barrett Browning and Smith are all concerned with writing poetry that reflects on its own ma...
Stevie Smith certainly drew on Lear’s nonsense poetry, but refused to be drawn on its similarity to ...
The recent publication of 'Eye Rhymes: Sylvia Plath’s Art of the Visual' (OUP, 2007) edited by Sally...
Panel on 'Hope and Despair'This paper aims at exploring the religious connections between Stevie Smi...
Stevie Smith's treatment of her two major themes of God and death reveals her seriousness as a poet;...
Critics of Stevie Smith’s work often lean on the word “flat.” Usually, the term is meant to evoke Sm...