AnOther E.E. Cummings

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W. W. Norton & Company, 17.12.1999 - 310 Seiten
An eye-opening selection of Cumming's more avant-garde poetry and prose.

As a poet, Cummings was a pioneer not only in linguistic and typographic inventions, but also in sound and concrete poetry. But his prose is no less experimental; he wrote memoirs, essays, and fiction that are constantly provocative and often radically experimental. To read the avant-garde Cummings is to read a writer who consistently broke with established norms, "never to rest and never to have: only to grow." To not read the avant-garde Cummings is to not read Cummings.
 

Inhalt

Deviant Traditional Verse
1
Erotic Poetry
43
Language Experiments
75
Visual Poetry and Sound Poetry
139
Texts Set to Music
167
Condensed Prose
185
Elliptical Narratives
205
A Book without a Title
215
Film Scenario
221
Translation
229
Arts Criticism
243
SelfPrefaces
265
Memoir
283
Index of Poems
307
Urheberrecht

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Autoren-Profil (1999)

E. E. Cummings (1894–1962) was among the most influential, widely read, and revered modernist poets. He was also a playwright, a painter, and a writer of prose. Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, he studied at Harvard University and, during World War I, served with an ambulance corps in France. He spent three months in a French detention camp and subsequently wrote The Enormous Room, a highly acclaimed criticism of World War I. After the war, Cummings returned to the States and published his first collection of poetry, Tulips & Chimneys, which was characterized by his innovative style: pushing the boundaries of language and form while discussing love, nature, and war with sensuousness and glee. He spent the rest of his life painting, writing poetry, and enjoying widespread popularity and success.

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