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- catalog abstract "In this book, Robert J. Cirasa contends that William Carlos Williams's The Collected Poems 1921-1931 and The Complete Collected Poems 1906-1938 are truly "lost" works of major accomplishment in the Williams canon. In each, Williams took as the basic element, or constituent sections, of these two large-scale literary structures the tacit lyrical sequences that had constituted his originally separate volumes of verse, also added new groupings as he made changes to the old, and fashioned them all into a unique series of lyrical sequence (a lyrical super-sequence) that gave unified lyrical definition and compelling lyrical immediacy to the whole of his poetic development. Together, the two works stand equal to Paterson in belying the still occasionally expressed view of Williams as primarily a miniaturist.".
- catalog contributor b9143972.
- catalog contributor b9143973.
- catalog created "c1995.".
- catalog date "1995".
- catalog date "c1995.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1995.".
- catalog description "In this book, Robert J. Cirasa contends that William Carlos Williams's The Collected Poems 1921-1931 and The Complete Collected Poems 1906-1938 are truly "lost" works of major accomplishment in the Williams canon. In each, Williams took as the basic element, or constituent sections, of these two large-scale literary structures the tacit lyrical sequences that had constituted his originally separate volumes of verse, also added new groupings as he made changes to the old, and fashioned them all into a unique series of lyrical sequence (a lyrical super-sequence) that gave unified lyrical definition and compelling lyrical immediacy to the whole of his poetic development. Together, the two works stand equal to Paterson in belying the still occasionally expressed view of Williams as primarily a miniaturist.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 334-335) and indexes.".
- catalog description "Introduction: "To Gain 'Profundity'" -- 1. A New Textual Order, a New Lyrical Focus -- 2. The Opening Sequence of "Poems" -- 3. Broadening the Scope, Entrenching the Feeling: "Primavera," "Spring and All," and "The Descent of Winter" -- 4. Retrenching Ambitions, Pacifying Feeling: "The Flower" and "(Prior to 1921)" -- 5. An Accomplished Book -- 6. "Completing" the Collected Poems -- 7. The Closing Sequence of "Longer Poems": Fixing the World's Modernity -- and the Volume's Lyrical Dynamics -- 8. The Cruder Counterparts to "Longer Poems": "The Tempers," "Transitional," and "Al Que Quiere" -- 9. Toward a Greater Equivalence with "Longer Poems": "Sour Grapes," "Spring and All," and "The Descent of Winter" -- 10. A Better Record than "Longer Poems": "Collected Poems 1934," "An Early Martyr," "Adam & Eve and The City," and "Recent Verse" -- 11. "Much More to It Than I Thought Would Be Involved": Some Problems with the Texts -- 12. The Collected Earlier Poems: An Inferior Successor.".
- catalog extent "342 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Lost works of William Carlos Williams.".
- catalog identifier "0838635768 (alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Lost works of William Carlos Williams.".
- catalog issued "1995".
- catalog issued "c1995.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Madison [N.J.] : Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ; London : Associated University Presses,".
- catalog relation "Lost works of William Carlos Williams.".
- catalog subject "811/.52 20".
- catalog subject "Cycles (Literature)".
- catalog subject "PS3545.I544 Z5827 1995".
- catalog subject "Williams, William Carlos, 1883-1963 Criticism and interpretation.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: "To Gain 'Profundity'" -- 1. A New Textual Order, a New Lyrical Focus -- 2. The Opening Sequence of "Poems" -- 3. Broadening the Scope, Entrenching the Feeling: "Primavera," "Spring and All," and "The Descent of Winter" -- 4. Retrenching Ambitions, Pacifying Feeling: "The Flower" and "(Prior to 1921)" -- 5. An Accomplished Book -- 6. "Completing" the Collected Poems -- 7. The Closing Sequence of "Longer Poems": Fixing the World's Modernity -- and the Volume's Lyrical Dynamics -- 8. The Cruder Counterparts to "Longer Poems": "The Tempers," "Transitional," and "Al Que Quiere" -- 9. Toward a Greater Equivalence with "Longer Poems": "Sour Grapes," "Spring and All," and "The Descent of Winter" -- 10. A Better Record than "Longer Poems": "Collected Poems 1934," "An Early Martyr," "Adam & Eve and The City," and "Recent Verse" -- 11. "Much More to It Than I Thought Would Be Involved": Some Problems with the Texts -- 12. The Collected Earlier Poems: An Inferior Successor.".
- catalog title "The lost works of William Carlos Williams : the volumes of collected poetry as lyrical sequences / Robert J. Cirasa.".
- catalog type "Criticism, interpretation, etc. fast".
- catalog type "text".