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The Humane Particulars - The Collected Letters of William Carlos Williams and Kenneth Burke (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R1,247
Discovery Miles 12 470
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The Humane Particulars - The Collected Letters of William Carlos Williams and Kenneth Burke (Hardcover, New)
Series: Studies in Rhetoric/Communication
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Significantly deepening our understanding of two key figures from
the modernist period, The Humane Particulars collects the letters
between William Carlos Williams and Kenneth Burke. Written during
forty-two years of close friendship and literary debate, these
nearly 250 letters span two long lives, two complicated
personalities, and two brilliantly productive careers. The animated
exchange between a canonical poet and the leading American
rhetorical critic of the twentieth century offers a more complete
vision of their outlooks and their contributions to the shape and
tenor of the modernist scene. Set in context by James H. East's
introduction and explanatory notes, the letters begin just after
Burke and Williams's initial meeting in 1921 during a tramp through
a New Jersey swamp and surrounding meadowlands. Their written
exchange follows the maturing of their friendship and professional
regard. The correspondence shows that Williams and Burke were fast
friends during the experimental twenties, preoccupied by individual
and divergent projects in the thirties and early forties, and
reunited as enthusiastic correspondents after the Second World War.
The letters refer to happy times spent together - walks in the
woods, picnics and swimming, and visits to Burke's farm in Andover,
New Jersey. They reveal, among other interesting personal matters,
Burke's fascination with Williams's double life as physician and
poet, Burke's hypochondria, and Williams's at times chastising
medical advice to Burke. But, more important, the letters preserve
the continual wrangling over the origin and nature of literary form
that enlightened the pair's many disagreements. Of particular
interest, the correspondence documents a largely unexplored aspect
of Burke's career - his reciprocally influential relationship with
the writers of the late modern and midcentury periods.
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