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LRB Article PDF: Distraction v. Attraction (<i>LRB</i> volume 24 number 12, 27 June 2002) 

LRB Article PDF: Distraction v. Attraction (LRB volume 24 number 12, 27 June 2002)

Barbara Everett

This essay, in an earlier version, given as a paper at the conference on 'Something We Have that They Don't: Anglo-American Poetic Relations since the War', organised by Mark Ford and Steve Clark under the aegis of the University of London.

Few 20th-century events, even in literary history alone, were at once important and relatively harmless. One was the rise and fall of Anglo-American literature. I use the term, in what may be too subjective a sense, to span the period from the birth of Whitman to the death of T.S. Eliot. It could be said that before Whitman, no American poet of real gifts wrote American literature; and after Eliot, none wrote anything else. Between these two points, two cultures, already to different degrees and in different ways interdependent, began to produce a fused, rich and ambiguous literature. This is a large subject, and I shan't attempt to cover it. I want merely to offer some comment on three poets - Eliot, Larkin and Ashbery - who may all be said to throw different kinds of light on the phenomenon of Anglo-American culture.

LRB 27 June 2002 | PDF Download

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