Oppen, George - Burton Hatlen (essay date 1993)
Burton Hatlen (essay date 1993)
SOURCE: “‘Feminine Technologies’: George Oppen Talks at Denise Levertov,” in The American Poetry Review, Vol. 22, No. 3, May-June, 1993, pp. 9-15.
[In the following essay, Hatlen suggests Oppen's poem “Technologies” is a response to Denise Levertov's “Who Is at My Window.”]
In 1958 George Oppen returned to New York City determined to resume the literary career he had suspended in 1935, when he and his wife Mary joined the Communist Party. But the New York cultural scene of the late 1950s and early 1960s was very different from the one Oppen had left behind in 1935. By 1959, various currents which would later issue in the New Left and the counter-culture of the 1960s were already stirring in New York City. In this paper I want to focus on Oppen's response to one movement which would swell in force throughout the 1960s: the new wave of feminist consciousness, which revived a movement...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Ezra Pound (essay date 1934)
- William Rose Benet (essay date 1934)
- William Carlos Williams (review date 1934)
- Denise Levertov (essay date 1963)
- Donald Davie (essay date 1973)
- Paul Zweig (essay date 1973)
- Kevin Powers with George and Mary Oppen (interview date 1975)
- Cid Corman (review date 1976)
- John Taggart (essay date 1979)
- Alan Young (essay date 1980)
- Cid Corman (essay date 1981)
- Harvey Kail (essay date 1981)
- David McAleavy (essay date 1981)
- Norman M. Finkelstein (essay date 1981)
- Andrew Crozier (essay date 1984)
- Michael Heller (essay date 1985)
- Alan Golding (essay date 1988)
- Burton Hatlen (essay date 1993)
- Cauthen Cramer (essay date 1994)
- Further Reading
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