翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ British Rail Class 175
・ British Rail Class 180
・ British Rail Class 185
・ British Pharmacopoeia
・ British Philatelic Bulletin
・ British Philatelic Trust
・ British Philosophical Association
・ British philosophy
・ British Phonographic Industry
・ British Phosphate Commission
・ British Photographic Portrait Prize
・ British Pipeline Agency
・ British Plant Communities
・ British Plant Gall Society
・ British poetry
British Poetry Revival
・ British Poetry since 1945
・ British Polar Engines
・ British police strikes in 1918 and 1919
・ British Polio Fellowship
・ British Polish Chamber of Commerce
・ British Politics (journal)
・ British Polling Council
・ British pop music
・ British popular music
・ British Porpoise-class submarine
・ British post offices in China
・ British post offices in Crete
・ British post offices in Morocco
・ British postal agencies in Eastern Arabia


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

British Poetry Revival : ウィキペディア英語版
British Poetry Revival

"The British Poetry Revival" is the general name given to a loose poetry movement in Britain that took place in the 1960s and 1970s. The revival was a modernist-inspired reaction to the Movement's more conservative approach to British poetry. The poets included Bill Griffiths, Allen Fisher, Iain Sinclair, Gilbert Adair, Lawrence Upton, Peter Finch, Ulli Freer, Gavin Selerie, Frances Presley, Elaine Randell, Robert Sheppard, Adrian Clarke, Clive Fencott, Maggie O'Sullivan, cris cheek, Tony Lopez and Denise Riley.
==Beginnings==
If the Movement poets looked to Thomas Hardy as a poetic model, the poets associated with the British Poetry Revival were more likely to look to modernist models, such as the American poets Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams and British figures such as David Jones, Basil Bunting and Hugh MacDiarmid. Although these major British poets had effectively been written out of official histories of 20th century British poetry, by the beginning of the 1960s a number of younger poets were starting to explore poetic possibilities that the older writers had opened up.
These poets included Roy Fisher, Gael Turnbull, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Bob Cobbing, Jeff Nuttall, Tom Raworth, Michael Horovitz, Eric Mottram, Peter Finch, Edwin Morgan, Jim Burns, Elaine Feinstein, Lee Harwood, Dick Russell and Christopher Logue. Many of these poets joined Allen Ginsberg and an audience of 7,000 people at the Albert Hall International Poetry Incarnation on 11 June 1965 to create what was, effectively, the first British happening.
These poets provided a wide range of modes and models of how modernism could be integrated into British poetry. Fisher, also a professional jazz pianist, applied the lessons of William Carlos Williams' ''Paterson'' to his native Birmingham in his long poem ''City''. Turnbull, who spent some time in the U. S., was also influenced by Williams. His fellow Scots Morgan and Finlay both worked with found, sound and visual poetry. Mottram, Nuttall, Horovitz and Burns were all close to the Beat generation writers. Mottram and Raworth were also influenced by the Black Mountain poets while Raworth and Harwood shared an interest in the poets of the New York School.
A number of publishing outlets for this new experimental poetry also began to spring up, including Turnbull's Migrant Press, Raworth's Matrix Press and Goliard Press, Horovitz's ''New Departures'', Stuart Montgomery's Fulcrum Press, Tim Longville's ''Grosseteste Review'', Galloping Dog Press and its ''Poetry Information'' magazine, Pig Press, Andrew Crozier and Peter Riley's ''The English Intelligencer'', Crozier's Ferry Press, and Cobbing's Writers Forum. In addition to the poets of the revival, many of these presses and magazines also published ''avant-garde'' American and European poetry. The first anthology to present a wide-ranging selection of the new movement was Horovitz's ''Children of Albion: Poetry of the Underground in Britain'' (1969).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「British Poetry Revival」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.