Sharpe, Tony, 1952– Editor of Compilation
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ANTONELLO MANACORDA conducteur italien • Formation o études de violon entres autres avec Herman Krebbers à Amsterdam o puis, à partir de 2002, deux ans de direction d’orchestre chez Jorma Panula. • Orchestres o 1997 : il crée, avec Claudio Abbado, le Mahler Chamber Orchestra o 2006 : nommé chef permanent de l’ensemble I Pomeriggi Musicali à Milaan o 2010 : nommé chef permanent du Kammerakademie Potsdam o 2011 : chef permanent du Gelders Orkest o Frankfurt Radio Symphony, BBC Philharmonic, Mozarteumorchester Salzburg, Sydney Symphony, Orchestra della Svizzera Italia, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Stavanger Symphony, Swedish Chamber Orchestra, Hamburger Symphoniker, Staatskapelle Weimar, Helsinki Philharmonic, Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse & Gothenburg Symphony • Fil rouge de sa carrière o collaboration artistique de longue durée avec La Fenice à Venise • Pour la Monnaie o dirigeerde in april 2016 het Symfonieorkest van de Munt in werk van Mozart en Schubert • Projets récents et futurs o Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Don Giovanni & L’Africaine à Frankfort, Lucio Silla & Foxie! La Petite Renarde rusée à la Monnaie, Le Nozze di Figaro à Munich, Midsummer Night’s Dream à Vienne et Die Zauberflöte à Amsterdam • Discographie sélective o symphonies de Schubert avec le Kammerakademie Potsdam (Sony Classical - courroné par Die Welt) o symphonies de Mendelssohn également avec le Kammerakademie Potsdam (Sony Classical) • Pour en savoir plus o http://www.inartmanagement.com o http://www.antonello-manacorda.com CHRISTOPHE COPPENS Artiste et metteur -
An Index to Alan Ansen's the Table Talk of W. H. Auden Edited By
An Index to Alan Ansen’s The Table Talk of W. H. Auden Edited by Nicholas Jenkins Index Compiled by Jacek Niecko A Supplement to The W. H. Auden Society Newsletter Number 20 • June 2000 Jacek Niecko is at work on a volume of conversations and interviews with W. H. Auden. Adams, Donald James 68, 115 Christmas Day 1941 letter to Aeschylus Chester Kallman 105 Oresteia 74 Collected Poems (1976) 103, 105, Akenside, Mark 53 106, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, Amiel, Henri-Frédéric 25 114, 116, 118 Andrewes, Lancelot 75 Collected Poetry 108 Meditations 75 Dark Valley, The 104 Sermons 75 Dog Beneath the Skin, The 51, 112 Aneirin Dyer’s Hand, The xiii, 100, 109, 111 Y Gododdin 108 “Easily, my dear, you move, easily Ann Arbor, Michigan 20, 107 your head” 106 Ansen, Alan ix-xiv, 103, 105, 112, 115, Enemies of a Bishop, The 22, 107 117 English Auden, The 103, 106, 108, Aquinas, Saint Thomas 33, 36 110, 112, 115, 118 Argo 54 Forewords and Afterwords 116 Aristophanes For the Time Being 3, 104 Birds, The 74 Fronny, The 51, 112 Clouds, The 74 “Greeks and Us, The” 116 Frogs, The 74 “Guilty Vicarage, The” 111 Aristotle 33, 75, 84 “Hammerfest” 106 Metaphysics 74 “Happy New Year, A” 118 Physics 74 “I Like It Cold” 115 Arnason Jon “In Memory of W.B. Yeats” xv, 70 Icelandic Legends 1 “In Search of Dracula” 106 Arnold, Matthew xv, 20, 107 “In Sickness and In Health” 106 Asquith, Herbert Henry 108 “In the Year of My Youth” 112 Athens, Greece 100 “Ironic Hero, The” 118 Atlantic 95 Journey to a War 105 Auden, Constance Rosalie Bicknell “Law Like Love” 70, 115 (Auden’s mother) 3, 104 Letter to Lord Byron 55, 103, 106, Auden, Wystan Hugh ix-xv, 19, 51, 99, 112 100, 103-119 “Malverns, The” 52, 112 “A.E. -
Introduction
Notes Introduction 1. For more on the Romanticism and Classicism debate in the maga- zines, see David Goldie’s Critical Difference: T. S. Eliot and John Middleton Murry in English Literary Criticism, 1918–1929 (69– 127). Harding’s discussion in his book on Eliot’s Criterion of the same debate is also worth reviewing, especially his chapter on Murry’s The Adelphi; see 25–43. 2. Esty suggests that the “relativization of England as one culture among many in the face of imperial contraction seems to have entailed a relativization of literature as one aspect of culture . [as] the late modernist generation absorbed the potential energy of a contracting British state and converted it into the language not of aesthetic decline but of cultural revival” (8). In a similar fashion, despite Jason Harding’s claim that Eliot’s periodical had a “self-appointed role as a guardian of European civilization,” his extensive study of the magazine, The “Criterion”: Cultural Politics and Periodical Networks in Inter-War Britain, as the title indicates, takes Criterion’s “networks” to exist exclusively within Britain (6). 3. See Suzanne W. Churchill, The Little Magazine Others and the Renovation of Modern American Poetry; Eric White, Transat- lantic Avant-Gardes: Little Magazines and Localist Modernism; Adam McKible, The Space and Place of Modernism: The Russian Revolution, Little Magazines, and New York; Mark Morrisson, The Public Face of Modernism: Little Magazines, Audience, and Reception, 1905–1920; Faith Binckes, Modernism, Magazines, and the Avant-Garde: Reading “Rhythm,” 1910–1914. 4. Thompson writes, “Making, because it is a study in an active process, which owes as much to agency as to conditioning. -
Poetry, Place, and Spiritual Practices by Katharine Bubel BA, Trinity
Edge Effects: Poetry, Place, and Spiritual Practices by Katharine Bubel B.A., Trinity Western University, 2004 M.A., Trinity Western University, 2009 A Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of English Katharine Bubel, 2018 University of Victoria All rights reserved. This dissertation may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. ii Supervisory Committee Edge Effects: Poetry, Place, and Spiritual Practices by Katharine Bubel B.A., Trinity Western University, 2004 M.A., Trinity Western University, 2009 Supervisory Committee Dr. Nicholas Bradley, Department of English Supervisor Dr. Magdalena Kay, Department of English Departmental Member Dr. Iain Higgins, Department of English Departmental Member Dr. Tim Lilburn, Department of Writing Outside Member iii Abstract "Edge Effects: Poetry, Place, and Spiritual Practices” focusses on the intersection of the environmental and religious imaginations in the work of five West Coast poets: Robinson Jeffers, Theodore Roethke, Robert Hass, Denise Levertov, and Jan Zwicky. My research examines the selected poems for their reimagination of the sacred perceived through attachments to particular places. For these writers, poetry is a constitutive practice, part of a way of life that includes desire for wise participation in the more-than-human community. Taking into account the poets’ critical reflections and historical-cultural contexts, along with a range of critical and philosophical sources, the poetry is examined as a discursive spiritual exercise. It is seen as conjoined with other focal practices of place, notably meditative walking and attentive looking and listening under the influence of ecospiritual eros. -
The Cases of Venedikt Erofeev, Kurt Vonnegut, and Victor Pelevin
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Scholarship@Western Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository 8-21-2012 12:00 AM Burying Dystopia: the Cases of Venedikt Erofeev, Kurt Vonnegut, and Victor Pelevin Natalya Domina The University of Western Ontario Supervisor Professor Calin-Andrei Mihailescu The University of Western Ontario Graduate Program in Comparative Literature A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree in Master of Arts © Natalya Domina 2012 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Comparative Literature Commons Recommended Citation Domina, Natalya, "Burying Dystopia: the Cases of Venedikt Erofeev, Kurt Vonnegut, and Victor Pelevin" (2012). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 834. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/834 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BURYING DYSTOPIA: THE CASES OF VENEDIKT EROFEEV, KURT VONNEGUT, AND VICTOR PELEVIN (Spine Title: BURYING DYSTOPIA) (Thesis Format: Monograph) by Natalya Domina Graduate Program in Comparative Literature A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada Natalya Domina 2012 THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO SCHOOL OF GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL STUDIES CERTIFICATE OF EXAMINATION Supervisor Examiners ____________________________ ________________________________ Prof. -
Sam Milne Agenda Talk
1 W S MILNE ‘Agenda Magazine, a Short History’ A talk given on 5 October 2019 at the Art Workers Guild, Queen Square, London to celebrate Agenda’s 60 th birthday “Cookson, OK. Stop Agenda with no.4 or 5!” This telegraphic instruction of Pound’s, thankfully, of course, William Cookson never heeded. We’re now on issue No.220 or thereabouts, I think – a Special Issue on Anglo- French Poetry in the pipeline, a reminder perhaps that Agenda has always had a global orientation, not merely a national one. Pound underestimated William’s obstinacy. Lord Gowrie (a long-time supporter of Agenda , and present here to speak after me) thought Mrs Thatcher the most stubborn individual he had ever met (whilst acting as Arts Minister in her Administration) that is, he confessed, until he met William Cookson. Ezra Pound’s role in founding Agenda has been well documented by William himself. In his introduction to Agenda’ s 21 st Anniversary Ezra Pound Special Issue he says: ‘Without the encouragement and generosity of Ezra Pound, Agenda would not have existed.’ He provides more details in his editorial introduction to Agenda: An Anthology: The First Four Decades 1959-1993 , where he states quite categorically: ‘The founder of Agenda was Ezra Pound,’ and proceeds to give us a potted history of the magazine’s genesis. Having started to read Pound at the age of fifteen, William reviewed Rock-Drill enthusiastically in the Westminster School magazine, The Trifler (of which he was a co- editor – running a magazine was in the family tradition, William’s father having founded English , the magazine of the English Association, in 1936). -
Dana Young Archive Featuring Brion Gysin, Charles Henri Ford, Ira Cohen, Ray Johnson, David Rattray, Harold Norse, and the Bardo Matrix
Dana Young Archive Featuring Brion Gysin, Charles Henri Ford, Ira Cohen, Ray Johnson, David Rattray, Harold Norse, and the Bardo Matrix. [top] A portrait of Dana Young in front of an altar of candles, Kathmandu (date and photographer unknown). [bottom] Detail of Dana Young cover for Ira Cohen’s Poem for La Malinche (Bardo Matrix, ca. 1974) and [right] Dana Young print of Ira Cohen, “The Master & the Owl,” (date unknown). Dana Young (ca. 1948–1979) Dana Young was an essential member of the Kathmandu psychedelic expatriate community of poets, musicians, artists, and spiritual seekers in the 1970s. His poetry and shamanic art blended Eastern spiritual imagery with American pop and consumer culture. He was an active member of the Bardo Matrix collective and is best known for his book Opium Elementals (Bardo Matrix, 1976) that features his beautiful woodblock prints along with two poems by Ira Cohen. He contributed to several other Bardo Matrix publications including Cohen’s Blue Oracle broadside (1975), the frontispiece to Paul Bowles’ Next to Nothing (1976), and Ira Cohen and Roberto Francisco Valenza’s Spirit Catcher! broadside (1976). His artwork also appears in publications such as Montana Gothic (1974) and Ins and Outs (1978). Dana designed the logo (included in the archive) for John Chick’s Rose Mushroom club located at the end of Jhochhen Tole, known as “Freak Street,” in Kathmandu. Most recently, one of Dana Young’s wood block prints was featured on the album cover of the recent release of Angus MacLise's Dreamweapon II. Materials in the present collection comprise the archive of Dana Young supplemented with letters, photographs, and assorted items from the Ira Cohen archive via Richard Aaron, Am Here Books. -
NY ACKER Awards Is Taken from an Archaic Dutch Word Meaning a Noticeable Movement in a Stream
1 THE NYC ACKER AWARDS CREATOR & PRODUCER CLAYTON PATTERSON This is our 6th successful year of the ACKER Awards. The meaning of ACKER in the NY ACKER Awards is taken from an archaic Dutch word meaning a noticeable movement in a stream. The stream is the mainstream and the noticeable movement is the avant grade. By documenting my community, on an almost daily base, I have come to understand that gentrification is much more than the changing face of real estate and forced population migrations. The influence of gen- trification can be seen in where we live and work, how we shop, bank, communicate, travel, law enforcement, doctor visits, etc. We will look back and realize that the impact of gentrification on our society is as powerful a force as the industrial revolution was. I witness the demise and obliteration of just about all of the recogniz- able parts of my community, including so much of our history. I be- lieve if we do not save our own history, then who will. The NY ACKERS are one part of a much larger vision and ambition. A vision and ambition that is not about me but it is about community. Our community. Our history. The history of the Individuals, the Outsid- ers, the Outlaws, the Misfits, the Radicals, the Visionaries, the Dream- ers, the contributors, those who provided spaces and venues which allowed creativity to flourish, wrote about, talked about, inspired, mentored the creative spirit, and those who gave much, but have not been, for whatever reason, recognized by the mainstream. -
W. H. Auden and His Quest for Love Poems of 1930S a Thesis
W. H. Auden and His Quest for Love Poems of 1930s A Thesis Presented to The Graduate School of Language and Culture Hiroshima Jogakuin Unxversity In Partial Fulfillment of The Requirements for the Degree Master of Artぷ by Hiromi Ito January 1998 CONTENTS Intro du ction "1929" II "The Wanderer" 23 Ill "A Summer Night {To Geoffrey Hoyland)〟 from Look, Stranger! 30 IV "0 what Is That Sound〝 from Look, Stranger! 42 "On This Island〝 from Look, Stranger! SB VI " Lullaby" 55 Conclusion . 61 Notes 63 Biblio grap hy 64 Intro duc tio n First of all, the writer would like to introduce a brief survey of W. H. Auden's biography. WysLern Hugh Auden was born on the t∬enty-first of February, 1907. in the city of York in the northern part of England. He is the third and last child of George Augustus Auden and Constance Rosalie Brickenell. They two are devout Chrxstians of the Church of England. Wystern was the youngest of three boys. In 1915, he entered St. Edmund School, where he first met Chrxstopher Isherwood. a colleague of his in his later years. Isherwood was three years ahead of Auden in school. Then he want on to Gresham′s school in Holt, Norfolk. He majored in biology, aiming to be a technical expert. He started to write poems in 1922 when his friend, Robert Medley asked him "Do you want to write a poem?" In 1925. he graduated from Gresham′s school, and then entered Christ Church College, Oxford University. He was an honor student majoring in natural sciences, and later he switched off Lo English literature. -
Sidney Keyes: the War-Poet Who 'Groped for Death'
PINAKI ROY Sidney Keyes: The War-Poet Who ‘Groped For Death’ f the Second World War (1939-45) was marked by the unforeseen annihilation of human beings—with approximately 60 million military and civilian deaths (Mercatante 3)—the second global belligerence was also marked by an Iunforeseen scarcity in literary commemoration of the all-destructive belligerence. Unlike the First World War (1914-18) memories of which were recorded mellifluously by numerous efficient poets from both the sides of the Triple Entente and Central Powers, the period of the Second World War witnessed so limited a publication of war-writing in its early stages that the Anglo-Irish litterateur Cecil Day-Lewis (1904-72), then working as a publications-editor at the English Ministry of Information, was galvanised into publishing “Where are the War Poets?” in Penguin New Writing of February 1941, exasperatedly writing: ‘They who in folly or mere greed / Enslaved religion, markets, laws, / Borrow our language now and bid / Us to speak up in freedom’s cause. / It is the logic of our times, / No subject for immortal verse—/ That we who lived by honest dreams / Defend the bad against the worse’. Significantly, while millions of Europeans and Americans enthusiastically enlisted themselves to serve in the Great War and its leaders were principally motivated by the ideas of patriotism, courage, and ancient chivalric codes of conduct, the 1939-45 combat occurred amidst the selfishness of politicians, confusing international politics, and, as William Shirer notes, by unsubstantiated feelings of defeatism among world powers like England and France, who could have deterred the offensive Nazis at the very onset of hostilities (795-813). -
Evolvong Wilds: Auden, Ecology, and the Formation of a New Poetics
EVOLVONG WILDS: AUDEN, ECOLOGY, AND THE FORMATION OF A NEW POETICS A thesis submitted To Kent State University in partial Fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by Jeremy Davis Jagger May 2020 © Copyright All rights reserved Except for previously published materials i Thesis written by Jeremy Davis Jagger B.A., Malone University 2016 M.A., Kent State University, 2020 Approved by Dr. Tammy Clewell, PhD. , Advisor Dr. Robert Trogdon, PhD. , Chair, Department of English Dr. James Blank, PhD. , Dean, College of Arts and Sciences ii TABLE OF CONTENTS………………………………………………………………………...iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS………………………………………………………………………..iv CHAPTERS I. A Legacy in Crisis…………………………………………………………………….1 II. A Brief Note on Sacred Objects………………………………………………………6 III. Ecology in the Audenesque………………………………………………………….11 IV. Auden, Politics, and Hints of the Ecological………………………………………...26 V. America, Yeats, and a New Poetics………………………………………………….45 VI. A Reformed Poetics in Practice……………………………………………………...53 VII. When Nature and Culture Collide……………………………………………………72 VIII. A Legacy Cemented………………………………………………………………….86 BIBLIOGRAPHY………………………………………………………………………………..89 iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The author would like to thank Dr. Tammy Clewell for her many contributions to the production of this text. He would also like to acknowledge the contributions of his committee, Dr. Ryan Hediger and Dr. Babacar M’Baye. iv A Legacy in Crisis For poetry makes nothing happen: it survives In the valley of its making where executives Would never want to tamper, flows on south From ranches of isolation and the busy griefs, Raw towns that we believe and die in; it survives, A way of happening, a mouth. —W.H. Auden, “In Memory of W.B. Yeat “The unacknowledged legislators of the world” describes the secret police, not the poets. -
City Lights Pocket Poets Series 1955-2005: from the Collection of Donald A
CITY LIGHTS POCKET POETS SERIES 1955-2005: FROM THE COLLECTION OF DONALD A. HENNEGHAN October 2005 – January 2006 1. Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Pictures of the Gone World. San Francisco: City Lights Pocket Bookshop, 1955. Number One 2. Kenneth Rexroth, translator. Thirty Spanish Poems of Love and Exile. San Francisco: City Lights Pocket Bookshop, 1956. Number Two 3. Kenneth Patchen. Poems of Humor & Protest. San Francisco: City Lights Pocket Bookshop, 1956. Number Three 4. Allen Ginsberg. Howl and Other Poems. San Francisco: City Lights Pocket Bookshop, 1956. Number Four 5. Marie Ponsot. True Minds. San Francisco: City Lights Pocket Bookshop, 1956. Number Five 6. Denise Levertov. Here and Now. San Francisco: City Lights Pocket Bookshop, 1957. Number Six 7. William Carlos Williams. Kora In Hell: Improvisations. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1957. Number Seven 8. Gregory Corso. Gasoline. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1958. Number Eight 9. Jacques Prévert. Selections from Paroles. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1958. Number Nine 10. Robert Duncan. Selected Poems. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1959. Number Ten 11. Jerome Rothenberg, translator. New Young German Poets. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1959. Number Eleven 12. Nicanor Parra. Anti-Poems. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1960. Number Twelve 13. Kenneth Patchen. The Love Poems of Kenneth Patchen. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1961. Number Thirteen 14. Allen Ginsberg. Kaddish and Other Poems. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1961. Number Fourteen OUT OF SERIES Alain Jouffroy. Déclaration d’Indépendance. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1961. Out of Series 15. Robert Nichols. Slow Newsreel of Man Riding Train. San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1962.