James Longenbach

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James Longenbach (Sept. 17, 1959 – July 29, 2022) was an

modernist poetry, namely that of Ezra Pound, W. B. Yeats, and Wallace Stevens, but came to include contemporary poetry as well. His book of criticism, The Resistance to Poetry, has been described as a "compact and exponentially provocative book."[1] Longenbach published six volumes of poetry including Earthling (2017), which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.[2]

Career

Longenbach received his bachelor's degree in 1981 from Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut and subsequently received his Ph.D. from Princeton University.

Longenbach was Joseph Henry Gilmore Professor of English at the

Los Angeles Times Book Review
.

Personal life

Longenbach was married to novelist

Rome, Italy in 1981.[2]
Scott eventually taught in the English Department of the University of Rochester.

Longenbach died at age 62 from cancer on July 29, 2022 in Stonington, Connecticut. He was survived by his wife and their two daughters.[2]

Selected bibliography

Prose

  • Modernist Poetics of History: Pound, Eliot, and the Sense of the Past (1987)
  • Stone Cottage: Pound, Yeats & Modernism (1988; Oxford University Press)
  • Ezra Pound’s Poetry and Prose: Contributions to Periodicals in Ten Volumes (1991) (co-editor)
  • Wallace Stevens: The Plain Sense of Things (1991; Oxford University Press)
  • Modern Poetry After Modernism (1997; Oxford University Press)
  • The Resistance to Poetry (2005; University of Chicago Press)
  • The Art of the Poetic Line (Dec. 2007; Graywolf Press)
  • How Poems Get Made (2018; W.W. Norton & Company)
  • The Lyric Now (2020; University of Chicago Press)

Poetry

  • Threshold: Poems (1998; University of Chicago Press)
  • Fleet River: Poems (2003; University of Chicago Press)
  • Draft of a Letter: Poems (Apr. 2007; University of Chicago Press)
  • the iron key: poems (2012; W.W. Norton & Company)
  • earthling: poems (2017; W.W. Norton & Company)
  • forever: poems (2021; W.W. Norton & Company)

References

  1. ^ review of The Resistance to Poetry Archived 2006-10-01 at the Wayback Machine at the journal Poetry. Accessed 3 July 2006.
  2. ^ a b c Tokar, Sofia (August 16, 2022). "James Longenbach 'made a central and rich place for poetry' at Rochester".

External links