Wilbur's Poetry: Music in a Scattering Time

Bruce F Michelson

Research output: Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook

Abstract

Poet laureate of the United States, two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize, chancellor of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, recipient of the Bollingen Prize, the Prix de Rome, and many other major honors, Richard Wilbur has been a central figure in American literature since World War II. Yet commentary about his poetry has been sparse. In this book, Bruce Michelson brings to Wilbur's achievement the close critical attention it deserves.

The first extended study of Wilbur's work in twenty-five years, Wilbur's Poetry explores the light poems, the darker mediations, the brilliant translations of Moliere and Racine, as well as the risks Wilbur has taken as an artist. There are chapters on Wilbur's unique use of language and his response to a vast poetic heritage, on form and closure and their thematic implications, and of Wilbur's place as a poet in a complex and "scattering" time.
Original languageEnglish (US)
PublisherUniversity of Massachusetts Press
Number of pages272
ISBN (Print)978-1-55849-774-0, 978-0-87023-741-6
StatePublished - Jun 1991

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