"What began in 1959 as a simple homage to the modernist poet H.D. (Hilda Doolittle) developed into an expansive and unique quest for a poetics that would fuel Duncan's great work into the 1960s and 1970s. A meditation on both the roots of modernism and its manifestation in the writings of H.D., Djuna Barnes, Ezra Pound, D.H. Lawrence, Gertrude Stein, William Carlos Williams, Virginia Woolf, and many others, Duncan's wide-ranging work is especially notable for illuminating the role women played in creating literary modernism"--Publisher description.
Yet Helen in Egypt is not a simple retelling of the Egyptian legend but a recreation of the many myths surrounding Helen, Paris, Achilles, Theseus, and other figures of Greek tradition, fused with the mysteries of Egyptian hermeticism.
See Susan Gubar's insightful analysis of female imagery in her valuable essay "The Echoing Spell of Fi.D.'s Trilogy," Contemporary Literature, 19, No. 2 (Spring 1978), 196-218. She argues that the "worm" image evokes the weaving and ...
Following her drowning, Natalia's manuscripts, a kind of experimental diary, are delivered to a publisher friend, and they provide the details which lay bare the often painful story. Publisher's note.
H.D. says the event took place in the " Museum tea room , " but Aldington , who acknowledges that his memory is vague , says it occurred in a Kensington tea shop , a site that has been identified as Ella Abbott's tea shop on Holland ...
Herself Defined: The Poet H.D. and Her World
Living with her mother in Switzerland during the time of World War II, Madge moves from the concerns of childhood to the edge of the more adult woes of love and loss, separation and community.
End to Torment: A Memoir of Ezra Pound is the deeply personal journal kept by the poet H. D. (Hilda Doolittle. 1886-1961) in 1958, the year Ezra Pound was released from St. Elizabeth's in Washington, D.C., and returned to Italy.
Hermione Gart, a young American newly arrived in Europe, begins to test for the first time the limits of her sexual and artistic identities "This novel . . . is a considerable lyric meditation on femaleness, sexual and maternal choices, and ...
All H.D. and Bryher scholars owe a debt to Susan Stanford Friedman's magisterial edition of the letters between Freud, H.D., Bryher, and their circle, Analyzing Freud, published by New Directions in 2002. 28.
This late collection, written in the last years of H.D.'s life, is a testament to the fine ear and mythic sense of a poet who is now recognized as one of the greatest of her generation.