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Charles Olson and Robert Creeley

The Complete Correspondence

Charles Olson and Robert Creeley( )
Editor: Butterick, George F.
Author: Olson, Charles
Creeley, Robert
ISBN:978-0-87685-482-2
Publication Date:Dec 1981
Publisher:David R. Godine Publisher
Imprint:Black Sparrow Press
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $15.95
Book Description:

Two great poets thinking through life and literature in an unequalled correspondence: Charles Olson & Robert Creeley: The Complete Correspondence: Volume 3. The ten-volume Charles Olson & Robert Creeley: The Complete Correspondence is an enormously valuable, often thrilling, record of the friendship between two major poets, their greatest work largely still ahead of them both. Working out their thoughts in letters, Olson credited Creeley with...
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Book Details
Pages:174
Detailed Subjects: Biography & Autobiography / Literary Figures
Literary Criticism / Poetry
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):5.84 x 8.97 x 0.56 Inches
Book Weight:0.548 Pounds
Author Biography
Olson, Charles (Editor)
The "elder statesman" of the Black Mountain school of poets, Charles Olson directly affected the work of fellow teachers Robert Duncan and Robert Creeley, as well as students including John Wieners, Jonathan Williams, Joel Oppenheimer, and Edward Dorn. In his Selected Writings (1967), Olson emphasizes "how to restore man to his "dynamic.' There is too much concern, he feels, with end and not enough with instant. It is not things that are important, but what happens between them. . . . He thinks of poetry as transfers of energy and he reminds us that dance is kinesis, not mimesis" (N.Y. Times). Human Universe and Other Essays is a collection of interesting pieces on subjects ranging from Homer to Yeats. Proprioception is one of Olson's seminal essays on verse and the poet's awareness.

Born in Worcester, Massachusetts, Olson attended Wesleyan, Harvard, and Yale Universities. He taught at Harvard University and Clark and Black Mountain colleges. He received two Guggenheim Fellowships and a grant from the Wenner-Gren Foundation to study Mayan hieroglyphs in the Yucatan. His involvement with early Indian societies stimulated his interest in mysticism and the drug culture.

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