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Barrier
of a Common Language
is part of the Poets on Poetry Series published by University
of Michigan Press.
From
the cover: "In Barrier of a Common Language Gioia addresses
the current disconnect between British and American poetry,
the result of America's growing postwar self-sufficiency in
its intellectual concerns. Writes Gioia, 'Today...most American
readers are not only unfamiliar with current British poetry,
but modestly proud of the fact. They do not dissemble, but urbanely
flourish their ignorance as an indisputable sign of discrimination.'
Whether
British poetry ever regains the importance in Anglo-American
literary traditions it had fifty years ago, Gioia believes,
will depend on the quality of service it receives from critics,
poets, editors, and anthologists who alone can make it accurately
heard and understood."
Contents:
- The
Barrier of a Common Language: New British Poetry in the Eighties
- The
Rise of James Fenton
- The
Most Unfashionable Poet Alive (Charles Causley)
- Home
is So Sad (Philip Larkin)
- The
Two Wendy Copes
- Short
Views
- Ted
Hughes
- Kingsley
Amis
- Tony
Connor
- Dick
Davis
- Thom
Gunn
- Charles
Tomlinson
- The Novelist as Poet (Anthony Burgess)
- Donald Davie's Imaginary Museum
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