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Loading... Ezra Pound: Poet, Volume II: The Epic Years 1921–1939by A. David Moody
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Belongs to SeriesEzra Pound: Poet (2)
The long-awaited second volume of A. David Moody's acclaimed three-part biography. The Epic Years examines Pound's middle years, a period which was also his most productive. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)811.52Literature American literature in English American poetry in English 20th Century 1900-1945LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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It's truly astonishing how important Pound was as a literary force; people have been making that point since, at least, Kenner's 'Pound Era.' But Moody is more willing to criticize Pound's ideas (rather often bad and/or immoral), without believing that their badness or immorality makes the man himself uninteresting. In fact, he assumes exactly the opposite, and tries to put the best possible spin on Pound's prose... right up until he says something truly despicable (usually about 'the Jews'). At that point Moody comes down on him as hard as anyone should.
Pound is fascinating because he's a kind of 20th century Ideal Type: democrat, yes, but also fascist; materialist, yes, but also obsessed with medieval metaphysics; writer of astonishing abilities who lets leftover romantic stupidities about poetry (essentially turning it into a religious vocation) distort what should have been one of the greatest collected poems of the century.
He wrote some incredible poems; he had an uncanny sense for what was truly important in art and worked tirelessly to promote it (see: Eliot, Joyce, Vivaldi). It's often said that Pound never really went insane, that the insanity was all a legal fiction designed to keep him off the gallows. But it's impossible to read the last third of this book and not see Pound's as a deeply disordered mind. Moody doesn't draw that conclusion; he simply gives you the evidence to draw your own, while making his own argument. A model biography. ( )