American Decades
Literature: The New Poetry
Peak Period.
Much of the credit for the identification of the 1910s as a period of literary renaissance must be given to its poets, who revolutionized literature—and whose works had close ties to those of the visual artists of the period. Chicago and New York contributed equally to the flood of new poets and new styles. At least eight periodicals devoted exclusively to poetry were founded during the decade. More-general literary and arts periodicals of the day, such as The Smart Set, Vanity Fair, The Atlantic Monthly, The Little Review, and The Seven Arts, featured poetry prominently, as did the nation's book-stores.
Regionalism.
Like several of their counterparts in prose, the greatest poets of the day chose specific regions of the country as their subjects. The poems in Edwin Arlington Robinson's The Town Down the River (1910) describe the residents of a fictional small town in New England....
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1910's The Arts
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- American Artists Rebel
- The Armory Show and its Legacy
- Dancers Break the Rules
- Literature: An American Voice Emerges
- Literature: The New Poetry
- Movies: The Business, the Studios, the Stars
- Movies: The Directors and the Pictures
- The Music Downtown
- The Music Uptown
- Theater: The American Stage in Transition
- Theater: Musicals Take Center Stage
- Theater: Vaudeville
- "The Village," the Salons, and Other Gatherings
- War and the Arts: The Two Faces of Patriotism
- Workers Unite: ArtÏSts Organize
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in The Arts, 1910–1919
