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         Crane Hart:     more books (100)
  1. Hart Crane: An Annotated Critical Bibliography. by Joseph. Schwartz, 1970
  2. Hart Crane: A Descriptive Bibliography (Pittsburgh series in bibliography)
  3. Vision of the voyage: Hart Crane and the psychology of romanticism by Robert Combs, 1978
  4. Hart Crane (Poet to Poet) by Hart Crane, 2008-05
  5. The poetry of Hart Crane, (Monarch notes and study guides) by John Paul Runden, 1965
  6. Critical essays on Hart Crane (Critical essays on American literature)
  7. The letters of Hart Crane, 1916-1932, edited by Brom Weber. by Hart] Crane, 1997
  8. Hart Crane's Harp of Evil: A Study of Orphism in "The Bridge" by Jack Wolf, 1986
  9. The Correspondence Between Hart Crane and Waldo Frank
  10. L'elancement: Eloge de Hart Crane (Fiction & Cie) (French Edition) by Gerard Titus-Carmel, 1998
  11. Hart Crane's holy vision, White buildings by Alfred Hanley, 1981
  12. Hart Crane a Life by CLIVE FISHER, 2001
  13. A Concordance to the Poems of Hart Crane
  14. Orizaba: A Voyage with Hart Crane by Stacy Szymaszek, 2008-04-01

61. Mystic Cat - Poetry By Hart Crane
Eliot Poe Rossetti Truth Mackey crane Born in 1899 in Garrettsville,Ohio, Harold hart crane was a highly anxious and volatile child.
http://www.catryce.com/MysticCat/Poetry/Crane.html
Home Poetry Poetry Now! Eliot ... Mackey
Hart Crane's work is perhaps best known for its laudatory images of industrial and urban life. "To Brooklyn Bridge," which has been called his greatest poem, is a glowing tribute to the grand bridge that connects the New York City boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn. When it was completed in 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge was the longest suspension bridge
in the world. "To Brooklyn Bridge" is one section of a longer work entitled The Bridge.
To Brooklyn Bridge How many dawns, chill from his rippling rest
The seagull's wings shall dip and pivot him,
Shedding white rings of tumult, building high
Over the chained bay waters Liberty— Then, with inviolate curve, forsake our eyes
As apparitional as sails that cross
Some page of figures to be filed away;

62. Hart Crane
NAME hart crane BORN July 21, 1899 COMMUNITY AFFILIATIONS born Garrettsville,Ohio(Portage County) OCCUPATION poet DIED April 26, 1932 FAST FACTS For a
http://ohiobio.org/crane.htm
NAME: Hart Crane
BORN: July 21, 1899
COMMUNITY AFFILIATIONS: born...Garrettsville, Ohio(Portage County)
OCCUPATION: poet
DIED: April 26, 1932
FAST FACTS:
For a time, Crane worked as a reporter for the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
He published his first poem in 1916. His first book of poetry, White Buildings, came out ten years later.
The Bridge , a book length poem published in 1930, is his most famous work.
Crane committed suicide by leaping from the deck of the S. S. Orizaba on a return trip from Mexico. He had been studying there under a Guggenheim Fellowship.
Return to Main Page
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63. Knitting Circle Hart Crane
hart Harold crane. Born 21st. His father was a businessman. hart crane's parentswere always quarrelling. hart crane had little formal education.
http://www.sbu.ac.uk/stafflag/hartcrane.html
The Knitting Circle: Poetry
Biography work bibliography
Hart Harold Crane
Born 21st. July, 1899, in Garrettsville, Ohio; died 1932.
US poet. He was brought up in Cleveland, Ohio. His father was a businessman. Hart Crane's parents were always quarrelling. Hart Crane had little formal education. He published his first poems at the age of 16 in 1916 in Greenwich Village literary magazines. His first published poem was entitled C 33 after the prison cell number occupied by Oscar Wilde Over the next decade he moved between New York and Ohio, scraping a living through a variety of jobs and handouts from his family. His employment included being advertising copywriter. His sexual exploits with other men began when he was a teenager and were detailed in his private notes. He had a particular interest in sailors. One of them was the Danish sea captain Elim Opffer who inspired six of Hart Crane's poems entitled Voyages His alcoholism and cadging of money tried the patience of his friends and family. After publishing his two books of poems, White Buildings , (1926) and The Bridge , (1930) he was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship and began to travel and devote himself to poetry. He went to California, Europe, Mexico, Key West, and other parts of the Caribbean.

64. Hart Crane / Jesse Glass
Daniel Sendecki. Poetry, images, and multimedia from Canada and abroad.February 06, 2003 ISSN 14992590. Jesse Glass. Stir mud with
http://www.sendecki.com/issuethree/craneglass.shtml
March 24, 2003
ISSN 1499-2590
Jesse Glass
Stir mud with
a blue claw, Crab,
the lank hair rise
with a wave, then drop.
It is
a sea change, a
gathering sharp kisses
from the beaks of gulls
who scream adoration to the Sun-poet jaw eroded by the tides. Lost celebrant returned by the obedient deeps– See the armored children run aslant across his meteoric brow. Each bone gem-like in its web of flesh, dismantled neatly like a word uncoined; he joins the crush of ciliated angels resurrected in a drop of foam as one fierce line prev page main next page Appearing in Version 3.0 The Word Uncoined / Spotlight on Jesse Glass Only Utter These... / Jesse Glass To Hart Crane / Jesse Glass Existential Comeuppance / Richard Fein ... e-mail

65. Hart Crane
RW, The Broken Arc A Study of hart crane (1969); crane, hart, The Complete
http://www.gratisweb.com/popbox/hcrane.htm

66. Hart Crane (1899-1932)
hart crane (18991932). Contributing Editor Margaret Dickie. ClassroomIssues and Strategies. I set crane in the context of Pound
http://college.hmco.com/english/heath/syllabuild/iguide/craneh.html
Hart Crane (1899-1932)
Contributing Editor: Margaret Dickie
Classroom Issues and Strategies
I set Crane in the context of Pound and Eliot where students can see the ambitions he shared with his fellow modernists to "make it new," to write a poem including history, even to define the role of the poet as a cultural spokesman. And, in that context, I try to distinguish the larger concerns of his career that set him apart from his fellow poets; his interest in the "logic of metaphor" as making it new, his focus on American rather than world history, and his search to find his identity in his role as a poet, all indicate how he reinterpreted the modernist program to suit his own purposes. I urge students, who may have been reading Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot through the footnotes to their poems, to abandon that approach to Crane and to concentrate instead on those elements they find most perplexing in his work: the language, the experience, and the dislocated references. Central to any discussion of Crane is his role as a homosexual poet. Quite apart from the task of placing him in the modernist movement, students will need to understand Crane's sense of himself as a figure marginalized both by his chosen profession as a poet in a capitalist economy and by his sexual identity as a homosexual in the ideology of literary and cultural authority that made, as Thomas Yingling has suggested, "homosexuality an inadmissible center from which to write about American life" (27). I introduce Crane with "Black Tambourine" and "Chaplinesque" where he identifies the poet with the "black man" and the tramp in order to show how he felt himself marginalized; and, as part of the discussion, I try to indicate also how he was willing to appropriate such marginal figures for his own use without much regard to their own status. In this respect, "Black Tambourine" can be compared to

67. Yingling, Thomas E.: Hart Crane And The Homosexual Text
Yingling, Thomas E. hart crane and the Homosexual Text, universitypress books, shopping cart, new release notification.
http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/3507.ctl
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Yingling, Thomas E. Hart Crane and the Homosexual Text New Thresholds, New Anatomies . x, 272 p. 1990 LC: 89048053 //r90 Class: PS3505.R272 Cloth $55.00tx 0-226-95634-2 Spring 1990
Paper $19.00tx 0-226-95635-0 Spring 1990 "Canonized for being insufficiently American although he took America as his subject, chastised for obscurity by readers who would not allow or would not read homosexual meanings, Crane embodies many understandings of America, and of the predicament of the gay writer." Voice Literary Supplement "A brilliant critical model for understanding how textuality and sexuality can produce pervasive effects on each other in the writing of a figure like Crane."Michael Moon, Duke University Subjects:
  • Gay and Lesbian Studies Literature and Literary Criticism: American and Canadian Literature Gender and Sexuality
The University of Chicago Press You may purchase this title at these fine bookstores . Outside the USA, consult our international information page File last modified on 3/10/2003.

68. Hart Crane, Papers, 1917-83
hart crane, Papers, 191783. Inventory. Prepared by Alex Gildzen.Revised Bibliography. hart crane Manuscripts, I. Scope and Content.
http://speccoll.library.kent.edu/literature/poetry/crane.html
Hart Crane, Papers, 1917-83
Inventory
Prepared by Alex Gildzen Revised and prepared for the Web by Athena Salaba, 12 February 1996 11th Floor, 1 cubic ft.
Biographical Sketch
Hart Crane was born in Garrettsville, Ohio, on July 21, 1899 and committed suicide by jumping from the S.S. Orziba in the Gulf of Mexico on April 27, 1932. He was the only child of Grace Edna Hart and Clarence A. Crane, original manufacturer of the Lifesaver. He grew up in Portage, Trumbull, and Cuyahoga counties. Among his first jobs were stints as a newspaper reporter for the Plain Dealer in Cleveland, and as a candy salesman at the Portage Drug Store in Akron. Crane published his first poem in 1916, and his first book, White Buildings , a decade later. His masterpiece, The Bridge , was first published in 1930 by the legendary Black Sun Press. Crane was the favorite poet of the great American playwright, Tenessee Williams. Robert Lowell called him the Shelley of his age. Literary scholar R.W.B. Lewis wrote about Crane as "one of the dozen-odd major poets in American historu." Crane's epic poem, The Bridge , was read on national television during the celebration of the Brooklyn Bridge.

69. Literature On The Web - Crane, Hart
Home. Literature on the Web. hart crane. 18991932. Last updated on August 16,2002. Biographical Information. The Academy of American Poets hart crane, by Prof.
http://www.nku.edu/~gregoryj/lit/c/craneh.htm
Home
Literature on the Web
Hart Crane
Last updated on August 16, 2002
Texts
For more information about the author or his work, click here
Poems

70. Periscope (Hart Crane)
Periscope (hart crane). Artist Jasper Johns Artist's Lifespan 1930Title Periscope (hart crane) Date 1963 Location of Origin
http://www.usc.edu/schools/annenberg/asc/projects/comm544/library/images/566.htm
Periscope (Hart Crane)
Artist: Jasper Johns
Artist's Lifespan:
Title:
Periscope (Hart Crane)
Date:
Location of Origin:
United States
Medium: Oil on canvas
Original Size: 67 x 48 in
Style: Neo-Dadaism
Genre: Common artifacts

71. Periscope (Hart Crane)
Periscope (hart crane). Artist Jasper Johns Title Periscope (hartcrane) Date 1963 Material Oil on canvas Original Size 67x48
http://www.usc.edu/dept/finearts/fa121/images/566.html
Periscope (Hart Crane) Artist: Jasper Johns
Title: Periscope (Hart Crane)
Date:
Material:
Oil on canvas
Original Size:
City/Country:

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72. Arts/Literature/Authors/C/Crane,_Hart
search feature. / Arts / Literature / Authors / C / crane, hart. Online TextArchives, Brad Lucas' hart crane Home Page . . . a gathering
http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/C/Crane,_Ha
Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Literature Authors C Crane, Hart Online Text Archives
Brad Lucas' Hart Crane Home Page

" . . . a gathering place for scholars and artists with a shared interest in the poetry and life of Hart Crane."
URL: http://unr.edu/homepage/brad/hart/crane.html

73. Modernism Archive, May, 1998: Re: Hart Crane
Re hart crane A. Lozynsky (lozynsky@ccs.sogang.ac.kr) Thu, 14 May 1998132537 +0900 Next message Robert Brookins Re hart crane ;
http://www.liquidsquid.com/modernism/mod/0598/0064.html
Re: Hart Crane A. Lozynsky ( lozynsky@ccs.sogang.ac.kr
Thu, 14 May 1998 13:25:37 +0900
The "jest" cannot refer to the crowd. The crowd is below the "bedlamite,"
their words could only go UP. The "speechless caravan" is the bridge. The
next stanza continues the imagery of descent"Down Wall . . . " and earlier,
"till elevators drop us."
Artem Lozynsky
Christopher Tidwell (ENG) wrote:

74. Bob Adamson Waving To Hart Crane
Anne Kellas. Waving to hart crane . Category Poetry. Bibliographicdetails Waving to hart crane, by Robert Adamson. Sydney Angus
http://www.the-write-stuff.com.au/archives/vol-1/poetry/waving.html
Index
vol. 1, 1995: Book reviews Interviews with writers
vol. 2, 2000: Eric Beach 'Weeping for Lost Babylon' Eric Beach poems
vol. 3, 2001: Anne Kellas Isolated States Poems from Mt Moono
vol. 4, 2001: Another Country: Tasmanian writers conference
vol. 5, 2002: Stephen Oliver Night of Warehouses
vol. 6, 2003: The poetry of Lionel Abrahams
vol. 7, 2003: Showcase of Tasmanian poets
Poetry
Contact us
Other reviews
ENTERING THE NEW CENTURY THROUGH GLASS' - the poetry of Bob Adamson
Review by Anne Kellas
Waving to Hart Crane Category: Poetry Bibliographic details:
A$ 16.95 'We enter the new / century through glass, / black oceans / and black winds, / thin fibre funnelling / poetry out / of

75. Critical Essays On Hart Crane (in MARION)
Critical essays on hart crane. Author Clark, David R. Published Boston, Mass. GK Hall 1982. Subject crane, hart, 18991932 Criticism and interpretation.
http://js-catalog.cpl.org:60100/MARION/ACN-4880
Critical essays on Hart Crane
Title:
Author:
Published:
  • Boston, Mass. : G.K. Hall [1982]
Subject:
Series:
Material:
  • viii, 280 p. ; 25 cm.
Note:
  • Includes bibliographies and index.
LC Card no:
  • ISBN:
  • System ID no:
    • ACN-4880
    Holdings:
    CLEVELAND/Literature
    • CALL NUMBER: PS3505.R272 Z65 Book Available
  • Data on this system is ©Board of Trustees, Cleveland Public Library.

    76. Hart Crane (in MARION)
    hart crane. Title hart crane / Clive Fisher. Author Fisher, Clive, 1960. PublishedNew Haven Yale University Press, c2002. Subject crane, hart, 1899-1932.
    http://library.tnstate.edu/MARION/ACI-9597
    Hart Crane
    Title:
    • Hart Crane / Clive Fisher.
    Author:
    • Fisher, Clive, 1960-
    Published:
    • New Haven : Yale University Press, c2002.
    Subject:
    • Crane, Hart, 1899-1932.
    • Poets, American 20th century Biography.
    Material:
    • viii, 567 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. ; 24 cm.
    Note:
    • Includes bibliographical references (p. [549]-552) and index.
    LC Card no:
  • ISBN:
    • 0300090617 (alk. paper)
    System ID no:
    • ACI-9597
    Message number 09808161
    Shelf - TSU
    • Message number 0848864BPS3505.R272 Z66 2002 BOOK Available
  • 77. [minstrels] To Brooklyn Bridge -- Hart Crane
    1101 To Brooklyn Bridge. Title To Brooklyn Bridge. Poet hart crane.Date 9 Oct 2002. 1stLine How many dawns, chil hart crane.
    http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/1101.html
    [1101] To Brooklyn Bridge
    Title : To Brooklyn Bridge Poet : Hart Crane Date : 9 Oct 2002 How many dawns, chil... Length : Text-only version Prev Index Next Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [ microfaq To Brooklyn Bridge Hart Crane http://www.catryce.com/MysticCat/Poetry/Crane.html

    78. TPQ OnLine - For Hart Crane
    Forty years later, the poet hart crane occupied those same rooms withhis lover, Emil Opffer. The From hart crane, To the Sea. Wearing
    http://trfn.clpgh.org/tpq/crane.html
    TPQ OnLine
    poetry by Robin Freund
    Washington Roebling, the son of John Roebling, completed his father's work as chief engineer of the Brooklyn Bridge. John Roebling died as a result of a ferry accident while working on the Brooklyn tower. Washington Roebling contracted Caisson's disease while at work on the New York tower and spent the remaining years, until the bridge's opening in 1883, supervising the construction through his window at 110 Columbia Heights. Forty years later, the poet Hart Crane occupied those same rooms with his lover, Emil Opffer. The bridge's promenade was a place they could walk together without inhibition. The seclusion offered by its towers and cables, as well as the piers underneath, made it a notorious meeting place for homosexuals. The Brooklyn Bridge, more importantly, a symbol of Crane's love affair with the city of New York, later became the centerpoint of his booklength poem, "The Bridge". For years, he had contemplated the metaphorical idea of "a bridge" as the subject of a book. After leaving New York for the Caribbean and Europe, his longing for the city put a name to that vision.
    110 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn

    79. Links To Literature: Hart Crane
    GENERAL RESOURCES. NY Times hart crane. Book reviews, articles about the author,and related links. Free registration required. The hart crane WebBridge.
    http://www.linkstoliterature.com/craneh.htm
    LINKS TO LITERATURE HOME BULLETIN BOARD LITERATURE NEWSLETTERS SUGGEST-A-SITE ... SEARCH THE WEB NEW! Enter to win a $100 Amazon.com Gift Certificate simply by referring friends to this site! To begin earning entries in the next drawing, please visit our Refer-A-Friend Page GENERAL RESOURCES WORKS GENERAL RESOURCES NY Times: Hart Crane Book reviews, articles about the author, and related links. [Free registration required] The Hart Crane WebBridge "The Poetry"; "Reference and Research Sources"; "People, Vendors, and Miscellaneous"; "Essays, Paers, and Explications"; and "Select Bibliography." Academy of American Poets: Hart Crane Photo, selected poems, hyperlinked biography, select bibliography, and links. Hart Crane Photo, biographical notes, and a bibliography. PAL: Hart Crane Primary and secondary bibliographies. WORKS At Melville's Tomb The Bridge To Brooklyn Bridge Carrier Letter ... North Labrador Need a second opinion? Try

    80. Featured Author: Hart Crane
    hart crane(Centennial Edition). The Complete Poems of hart crane (Centennial Edition).
    http://www.nytimes.com/books/99/07/18/specials/crane.html
    Featured Author: Hart Crane
    With News and Reviews From the Archives of The New York Times In This Feature
  • Reviews of Hart Crane's Books
  • Articles About Hart Crane Related Links
  • Langdon Hammer Reviews Paul Mariani's 'The Broken Tower: A Life of Hart Crane' (July 18)
  • First Chapter: 'The Broken Tower'
    Butler Library, Columbia University/ From "The Broken Tower" Hart Crane, photographed by Walker Evans in 1930. REVIEWS OF HART CRANE'S BOOKS:
  • White Buildings
    ". . . most of the time it is incomprehensible so far as the actual thought-content goes. Yet the line structure is so beautiful in itself, the images so vividly conceived, and the general aura of poetry so indelibly felt that the intelligent reader will move pleasurably among the impenetrable nuances."
  • The Bridge
    "Since to the mind of the present writer cubism, whatever value it may have for painting, is wholly valueless in poetry, 'The Bridge,' nevertheless, remains for him, in spite of its glitter and its seeming intellectual importance, a piece that is in the main spurious as poetry."
  • The Collected Poems of Hart Crane
    "The fact that the bridge could not uphold him is manifest in his later poems. But he was a gesture and a pulse of our modern times and his 'Collected Poems' is not an unimportant book. It is a testament of the broken vision of America and a promise for the future when our intellectual strength will support our emotional chaos."
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