Donated by Michael Dillon, June 2009. The letters of Ezra Pound to James Joyce with Pound's critical essays and articles about Joyce. This is the record of one of the most interesting personal relationships of modern literature.
Originally published in 1950 under title: The letters of Ezra Pound, 1907-1941.
But Quinn's way of expressing his contempt is vitriolic in Pound's manner rather than urbane in James's: Today there are conglomerations of different nationalities . . . victims of telephones, votaries of automobiles, worshipers at ...
James Joyce & Ezra Pound: A More Than Literary Friendship
The Most Dangerous Book tells the remarkable story surrounding Ulysses, from the first stirrings of Joyce’s inspiration in 1904 to the book’s landmark federal obscenity trial in 1933.
Letters of Note, the book based on the beloved website of the same name, became an instant classic on publication in 2013, selling hundreds of thousands of copies.
This first-ever compilation of the five-decade correspondence between these prime movers of the Vorticist movement in art represents a revealing reflection of their intense, always professional, mutual regard The friendship of Ezra Pound ...
The poems studied here are also discussed as focal points for relations between readerly and writerly selves and their situations in and over time.
The book examines key texts by the writers James Joyce, Wyndham Lewis, Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot as moves within a shared group-game - that of creating a new literature for the new age.
Jules Laforgue rather than Pater is the proper model, Pound argues, and in response to a remark by Thomas Hardy that the poem should be retitled “Propertius Soliloquizes,” Pound explains that “what I do is borrow a term—aesthetic—a term ...