Harold Bloom on PoetryReviews several books on poetry. "Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror," by John Ashbery; "Diversifications," by A.R. Ammons; "Tales Told of the Fathers," by John Hollander; "Buried City," by Howard Moss.Bloom, Harold...
Bloom, Harold (1930– ) literary critic, educator; born in New York City. He earned a Ph.D. at Yale, where he joined the faculty in 1955. Bloom overturned the humanistic view of literary tradition inThe Anxiety of Influence(1973). Consistently arguing against deconstruction and most other ...
Harold Bloom, American literary critic known for his innovative interpretations of literary history and of the creation of literature. For Chelsea House Publishers he edited numerous series to ‘chronicle all of Western literature.’ Learn more about Blo
布倫( Harold Bloom)在《西方典律》( The Western Canon)的附錄裏開列的那一份,從巴比倫史詩《吉伽美什》一直到 Tony Kushner的《天使在美國》,恐怕有過千本他老人家心目中最最重要的經典(裏頭還包括了《追憶逝水年華》這種大概要花兩個月才能讀完的大部頭)。 Spain Miguel de Unamuno Three Exemplary Novels ...
D.Poem Educator Harold Bloom has a Review on Poetry Understanding 答案(1)A.细节理解题。根据最后一段The mere exercise of getting as deeply into the words as possible shows them that meaning and possibility come from this act—not from a search for an interpretation,often ...
He also wrote Mac—a Memoir (1969), several volumes of poetry, the novel The Dwarfs (1990), numerous essays, and a miscellany, Various Voices (1999). An active director of his own work and that of other contemporary dramatists, Pinter oversaw the productions of numerous plays as well as...
Bloom’s scholarly range cursorily covers the last 500 years of Western poetry, showing a genealogy of giants starting from Shakespeare (purposely untreated in the study), who begat Milton, who begat Wordsworth, who begat Shelley and Keats, who begat Browning, who begat Yeats. A similar American...
When he was young, Bloom also memorized poetry for fun, and, after years of teaching Shakespeare’s plays, still knows them, most of “Moby Dick” and many of the other poems he teaches by heart. He believes that his extraordinary memory may be the result of Talmudic-scholar ancestors. ...
We are in the open Atlantic. Every poem about to open before you springs from a place and bears its name. At each of these wells, the earth speaks through human and animal life. Flowers bloom and knock around in the wind. There is always wind. ...
where are the charms and virtues which we dare conceive in boyhood and pursue as men, the unreach'd paradise of our despair, which o'er-informs the pencil and the pen, and overpowers the page where it would bloom again? cxxiii who loves, raves -- 'tis youth's frenzy -- but the ...