Ezra Pound

Critic, poet, impresario and propagandist, Ezra Pound was one of the shaping forces of modernism, with connections to the era's most influential writers or prose and poetry. In championing liberatory effects of free verse and skillfully practicing the technique of collage and allusion,Pound placed a value on novelty and formal experimentation that help define what we see as the avant grade to this day. His 1909 collection of poems, Personae, showed his deep engagement with both traditional lyrical froms, like the dramatic monologue, and radically new forms of expression.
In an introduction to the Literary Essays of Izra Pound, T. S. Eliot declared that Pound "is more responsible for the 20th century revolution in poetry than any other individual". In his article "How I Began," collected in Literary Essays, Pound claimed that as a youth he had reserved to "know more about poetry than any man living". Through his criticism and translations, as well as in his own poetry, particularly in his Cantos, Pound explored poetic traditions from different cultures ranging from ancient Greece, China, and the continent, to current day England and America.

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