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Imagism | Representative Works
Cathay
Ezra Pound, although a prominent definer and great promoter of Imagism was not a great practitioner of poetry with an imagist bent. The closest he came to incorporating purely imagist tenets in his poetry was a collection called Cathay (1915), which includes poems translated from the eighthcentury Chinese poet Li Po (also referred to as Rihaku). By working with these translations, Pound displays the interest and the influence that classical Japanese and Chinese poetry had upon the imagist.
Critics agree that this collection is one of Pound’s finest, at least...
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- Imagism: Introduction
- Imagism: Representative Authors
- Imagism: Representative Works
- Imagism: Themes
- Imagism: Style
- Imagism: Movement Variations
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- Imagism: Critical Overview
- Imagism: Essays and Criticism
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