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Transatlantic Connections

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Transatlantic Connections

Contributors:

By (Author) Theresa Welford

ISBN:

9781586540548

Publisher:

Red Hen Press

Imprint:

Red Hen Press

Publication Date:

31st March 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Gender studies: women and girls
Social and cultural history
Literary studies: poetry and poets
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Comparative literature

Dewey:

821.91409

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

6000

Dimensions:

Width 139mm, Height 215mm, Spine 15mm

Weight:

272g

Description

Theresa Welford's Trans-Atlantic Connections: The Movement and New Formalism is the first book to explore the important connections between the brash young British writers who coalesced into a controversial poetic and critical movement in the 1950s and the brash young American writers who coalesced into an equally controversial movement in the 1980s.

Reviews

"InTransatlantic Connections, Theresa Malphrus Welford explores the complex, sometimes fraught influence of the Movement on Americas New Formalismon not just its aesthetics but also its sense of the poets ideal role in society.Once marginalizedeven reviledNew Formalism has, four decades on, seeped into and transformed American poetry, sparking a renewed interest in meter, rhyme, narrative and received forms, even among primarily free verse poets.Welford persuasively and meticulously demonstrates how a loose affiliation of critically unfashionable British poets left an imprint on contemporary American poetry."April Lindner


"In her new book, Theresa Malphrus Welford offers a cogent study of poets separated by an ocean yet connected by sensibility. Through meticulous research, as well as interviews conducted especially for her project, she convincingly demonstrates the Movements profound influence on the first wave of New Formalists. Welford navigates the currents of literary history with admirable grace: we learn of Donald Davies mentorship of Dana Gioia, Timothy Steeles early embrace of Thom Gunn, Mark Jarmans subtle homages to Philip Larkin, and much more. In reconstructing the influence of both movements on poets writing today, Welford has produced an essential critical work that illuminates the productive kinship of two distinct generations and traditions."Ned Balbo, author of four bools of poetry:Galileos Banquet,Lives of the Sleepers,The Trials of Edgar Poe and Other Poems, andUpcycling Paumanok


"I had no idea who Larkin was then, but I knew immediately that he was the writer I had been looking fornot merely a master but a confidant."Dana Gioia


"We owe a great debt to poets like Richard Wilbur, Anthony Hecht, X. J. Kennedy, Thom Gunn (to name a fewadd J. V. Cunningham and Philip Larkin to the list . . .), who held the fort, so to speak, during the siege."Leslie Monsour


"Of course, in the older generation, even though they were a distinct minority, Wilbur and Larkin and Kennedy and Bowers and Gunnand, to mention a few others, Turner Cassity, Henri Coulette, Charles Gullans, W. D. Snodgrass, and Helen Pinkertonwere all writing beautiful formal poems, and that gave all of us who were younger and interested in form, great hope."Timothy Steele


"We love Larkin for the moments in which the gloom lifts, but we love him even more for the gloom itself. It is not by proposing an alternative vision in the manner of Yeats or Eliot that Larkin transcends the darknesswhether of modern squalor, or death, or simply the banal disappointments of ordinary late-twentieth-century livesbut by crystallizing it in verse so sharp and exact and surprising that, once read, it is never forgotten."Katha Pollitt


"Thom Gunn will no doubt prove to be a pivotal figure. For one thing, many of us looked up to him when we were young as a model of what the poet could be, and what we were so often told we could not bethat is, he felt free to write in any verse form he chose and never restricted himself in terms of subject matter. . . . Gunn, as an Englishman living in America, seemed a bridge to multiple possibilities for the art."David Mason


"This remarkable book offers a series of insights into a significantand, until now, largely neglectedtransatlantic poetic connection. Theresa Welford offers a convincing demonstration of just how much the New Formalist poets owe to their predecessors in the Movementand just how intricate and influential were the personal and textual exchanges between them. Her argument is finely nuanced, acknowledging both the similarities and the differences between the American and British groups. Her analyses of individual poems are subtle, sensitive and rigorous; and her argument places the texts and poets she discusses in exactly the right historical and cultural contexts. This is a groundbreaking book about an international poetic dialogue; it will be a vital and indispensable resource for anyone interested in the recent past, present and future of poetry."Richard J. Gray, University of Essex Emeritus Professor and author ofA History of American Literature,American Poetry of the Twentieth Century,A Web of Words: The Great Dialogue of Southern Literature, andAfter the Fall: American Literature Since 9/11

Author Bio

Theresa Malphrus Welford, who grew up in a small, working-class town near Savannah, Georgia, received a PhD in English Literature from the University of Essex in 2006. A two-time nominee for the Pushcart Prize, Theresa has published poetry, creative nonfiction, book chapters, and scholarly articles, as well as two edited collections of poetry: The Paradelle and The Cento (both published by Red Hen Press). She is currently working on two textbooks and a number of picture-book manuscripts. Theresa and her husband, Mark Welford, happily share their home in Statesboro, Georgia, with countless rescued animals (cats and dogs).

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