James Longenbach

James Longenbach is an American critic and poet. His early critical work focused on modernist poetry, namely that of Ezra Pound, W.B. Yeats, and Wallace Stevens, but has come to include contemporary poetry as well. Longenbach has published four books of poems: Threshold, Fleet River, Draft of a Letter, and The Iron Key. One recent book of criticism, The Resistance to Poetry, has been described as a "compact and exponentially provocative book."[1]

Longenbach is Joseph Henry Gilmore Professor of English at the University of Rochester and has taught at the University since 1985. His poems have appeared in many magazines and journals, including The New Yorker, The New Republic, The Nation, and The Yale Review, as well as The Best American Poetry 1995 anthology. He frequently reviews books for Boston Review, the Nation, and the Los Angeles Times Book Review.

He received his bachelor's degree in 1981 from Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut and his Ph.D. from Princeton University. His wife, novelist Joanna Scott (and fellow Trinity graduate), also teaches at the English Department of the University of Rochester. They have two children.

Bibliography

  • Modernist Poetics of History: Pound, Eliot, and the Sense of the Past (1987)
  • Stone Cottage: Pound, Yeats, and Modernism (1988)
  • Ezra Pound’s Poetry and Prose: Contributions to Periodicals in Ten Volumes (1991) (co-editor)
  • Wallace Stevens: the Plain Sense of Things (1991)
  • Modern Poetry After Modernism (1997)
  • Threshold (1998)
  • Fleet River (2003)
  • The Resistance to Poetry (2004)
  • Draft of a Letter, poetry collection (Spring, 2007)
  • The Art of the Poetic Line (2007)
  • The Iron Key: Poems (2010 W.W. Norton)
  • Earthling: Poems (2017)
gollark: I still just use netdata because laziness.
gollark: It's possible that the general modded playstyle discourages interactions like that because you can be self-sufficient easily.
gollark: CN... didn't *really* ever manage that?
gollark: I think the interesting part of SC and whatnot is that you have a big and long-running enough server that you can get dynamics like economies and towns and whatnot arising from it.
gollark: I meant that more than 10% of people who are *ever* users for a significant amount of time probably use CC.

References

  1. review of The Resistance to Poetry Archived 2006-10-01 at the Wayback Machine at the journal Poetry. Accessed 3 July 2006.
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