Literature and the Press
by Louis Dudek
from Ryerson Press
What was the effect of the Industrial Revolution in Printing on permanent literature and literary standards? Literature and the Press provides both theory and background for this discussion, so crucial to our own sense of historical canon, mass communications, and enduring literary quality. It should be read by every student of nineteenth and twentieth century literature.
Dk: Some Letters of Ezra Pound
by Ezra Pound
from DC Books
This correspondence with Ezra Pound covers the years from 1949 to very nearly the end of his life. It began as an offer to help, in his difficult days in St. Elizabeths, Washington, D.C., and it grew into a whirlwind of paper and communication for a few years; then it diminished after 1953. For the following years there was only a few scattered letters set off by some particular event — a new magazine, a radio broadcast — and finally the correspondence came to an end with the complications about Pound's coming to the World Poetry Conference at Expo in 1967.
Patterns of recent Canadian poetry
+++


