The Pound Era
Author | Hugh Kenner |
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Publisher | University of California Press |
Publication date | 1971 |
The Pound Era (ISBN 0520024273) is a book by Hugh Kenner, published in 1971. It is considered by many to be Kenner's masterpiece, and is generally seen as a seminal text on not only Ezra Pound but Modernism in general. As the title suggests, it places Ezra Pound at the center of the Modernist movement in literature and art during the early 20th century.
Kenner played an influential role in raising Ezra Pound's profile among critics and other readers of poetry. The Pound Era, the product of years of scholarship, was published in 1971. This work was responsible for enshrining Pound's reputation (damaged by his wartime activities) as one of the greatest Modernists.
External links
- Forgotten Books: The Pound Era [1]
- Some of the best lines from The Pound Era [2]
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Ezra Pound
- A Lume Spento (July 1908)
- A Quinzaine for this Yule (December 1908)
- "Ballad of the Goodly Fere" (1909)
- Ripostes (1912)
- "In a Station of the Metro" (1913)
- Cathay (1915)
- "The River Merchant's Wife: A Letter"
- Hugh Selwyn Mauberley (1920)
- The Cantos (1917–1968)
- Cultural references in The Cantos
- The Spirit of Romance (1910)
- Des Imagistes (1914)
- ABC of Reading (1934)
- Jefferson and/or Mussolini (1935)
- Guide to Kulchur (1938)
- Radio broadcasts, 1941–1945
- If This Be Treason (1948)
- William Wadsworth (maternal ancestor)
- Thaddeus C. Pound (grandfather)
- Dorothy Shakespear (wife)
- Omar Pound (son)
- Olivia Shakespear (mother-in-law)
- Olga Rudge (partner)
- Mary de Rachewiltz (daughter)
- Boris de Rachewiltz (son-in-law)
- Discretions
- The Pound Era
- Reading Pound Reading
- "Visits to St. Elizabeths"
- A ZBC of Ezra Pound
- Blast
- Brunnenburg
- CasaPound
- Julien Cornell
- Hieratic Head of Ezra Pound
- Hugh Kenner
- Ezra Pound (Lewis)
- Famous Last Words
- Modernism
- St. Elizabeths Hospital
- Vienna Café