Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Published poets are selected by Poetry International's national editors, based in their countries and often in collaboration with the major national poetry organization (such as the Poetry Foundation in the United States, Poetry East West in China, and the Poetry Society in the UK). Otherwise, the poets are published on the website because they ...
Poetry groups and movements or schools may be self-identified by the poets that form them or defined by critics who see unifying characteristics of a body of work by more than one poet. To be a 'school' a group of poets must share a common style or a common ethos.
One of the most famous examples of collaborative poetry-writing in modern times was the poem collection Ralentir Travaux [1] by Surrealist French poets André Breton, Paul Éluard and René Char. The poems were written collaboratively over the course of five days in 1930.
He judged the 2009 Cardiff International Poetry Competition for the award ceremony in June. In 2005, as "Poet Laureate" for the "Three Cities" (the "Three Cities" in this case being Nottingham, Leicester and Derby), he was involved in the "Three Cities Create and Connect scheme", which included a regional writing competition.
Born in Portlaoise, [1] Boran has lived in Dublin for a number of years. He is the publisher of the Dedalus Press [2] which specialises in contemporary poetry from Ireland, and international poetry in English-language translation, and was until 2007 Programme Director of the annual Dublin Writers Festival. [3]
The first appearance of the group was in a special issue of Poetry magazine in February 1931; this was arranged for by Pound and edited by Zukofsky (Vol. 37, No. 5).In addition to poems by Rakosi, Zukofsky, Reznikoff, George Oppen, Basil Bunting and William Carlos Williams, Zukofsky included work by a number of poets who would have little or no further association with the group: Howard Weeks ...
Barbara Guest wrote more than 15 books of poetry spanning sixty years of writing. "Her poems begin in the midst of action," wrote Peter Gizzi in his introduction to a collection of her work, "but their angle of perception is oblique." [3] Her poems are known for their abstract quality, vivid language, and intellectualism. She believed that the ...
P. Pegnesischer Blumenorden; PennSound; Pennsylvania Poetry Society; Poem for Rent; Poems in the Waiting Room; The Poet and the Poem; Poet in the City; Poetics and Linguistics Association