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Marianne Craig Moore (November 15, 1887 – February 5, 1972) was an American modernist poet, critic, translator, and editor. Her poetry is noted for its formal ...
Eight Poems is a 1962 poetry collection by the American poet Marianne Moore, with illustrations by Robert Andrew Parker. It was published by the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Only 195 copies were produced; each was signed by Moore and Parker. [1] Each of Moore's poems in the volume was accompanied by an image from Parker.
Pages in category "Poetry by Marianne Moore" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. E. Eight Poems; F.
O to Be a Dragon is a 1959 poetry collection by the American poet Marianne Moore, and the title of the collection's eponymous poem.It was published by Viking Press in New York City.
Marianne Moore, in contrast to some of extreme revolutionary female writers like Mina Loy or Helen Hoyt, departs from modern sexual conventions. Moore inclined to manipulate the use of grammar to equalize the positions of male and female subject and objects. She transforms language to free herself from the constraints of sexual difference. [3]
A female argonaut is also described in Marianne Moore's poem "The Paper Nautilus". "Argonauta" is the name of a chapter in Anne Morrow Lindbergh's Gift from the Sea. Paper nautiluses were caught in The Swiss Family Robinson novel. [24] Argonauts gave their name to an Arabidopsis thaliana mutation and by extension to Argonaute proteins.
She published a critical study of Marianne Moore in 1965 and a prose publication, Essays and Prose Poems, in 1970. [9] She also contributed to several publications, including The New Leader, The New Republic, Saturday Review of Literature, The Kenyon Review, Tomorrow, Botteghe Oscure, Poetry, Commentary, Arts Magazine, and the New York Herald ...
The Fish is a 1918 poem by the American poet Marianne Moore.The poem was published in the August 1918 issue of The Egoist.Moore's biographer, Linda Leavell, has described "The Fish" as "...one of Moore's best-loved and most mystifying poems" and that it is "Admired for its imagery and technical proficiency". [1]