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Events
- W. H. Auden becomes a U.S. citizen
- Ezra Pound brought back to the United States on treason charges, but found unfit to face trial because of insanity and sent to St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, D.C., where he remained for 12 years (to 1958).
- Upon learning about Isaiah Berlin's visit to Russian poet Anna Akhmatova this year, Stalin's associate Andrei Zhdanov, with the approval of the Soviet Central Committee, issued the "Zhdanov decree" denouncing her as a "half harlot, half nun", and had her poems banned from publication. The 1946 resolution of the Central Committee was directed against two literary magazines, Zvezda and Leningrad, which had published supposedly apolitical, "bourgeois", individualistic works of Akhmatova and the satirist Mikhail Zoshchenko. In time Akhmatova's son would spend his youth in Stalinist gulags, and she would resort to publishing several poems in praise of Stalin to secure his release.
Works published
- Elizabeth Bishop, * North & South, (Houghton Mifflin)
- Roy Campbell, Talking Bronco
- Allen Curnow, Jack Without Magic (Caxton), New Zealand[1]
- Walter De la Mare, The Traveller
- H.D., "The Flowering of the Rod", the final part of Trilogy, a three-part poem on the experience of the blitz in wartime London
- Lawrence Durrell Cities, Plain and People
- Odysseus Elytis, An Heroic And Funeral Chant For The Lieutenant Lost In Albania
- G. Groll, editor, De profundis, anthology of non-Nazi texts, Germany[2]
- Maurice Lindsay, editor, Modern Scottish Poetry: An Anthology of the Scottish Renaissance 1920-1945 (Faber and Faber)
- Robert Lowell, Lord Weary's Castle, New York: Harcourt, Brace[3]
- James Merrill, The Black Swan (won Glascock Prize
- Lorine Niedecker, New Goose, her first poetry collection
- Henry Reed, A Map of Verona, including "Naming of Parts"
- Kendrick Smithyman, Seven Sonnets, Auckland: Pelorus Press, New Zealand
- Dylan Thomas, Deaths and Entrances, including "Fern Hill" and "A Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London"
- R. S. Thomas, The Stones of the Field
- William Carlos Williams, Paterson, Book I
- Reed Whittemore, Heroes & Heroines
Criticism, scholarship and biography
Awards and honors
Births
Deaths
- January 9 — Countee Cullen, 42, African American poet
- March 1 — Adriana Porter, 89, Wiccan poet
- May 25 — Ernest Rhys, 87, British poet, author, novelist, essayist best known for his role as founding editor of the Everyman's Library series of affordable classics
- July 8 — Orrick Glenday Johns, 59, American poet and playwright
- July 27 — Gertrude Stein, 73, poet and dramatist, of cancer
See also
Notes
- ^ Allen Curnow Web page at the New Zealand Book Council website, accessed April 21, 2008
- ^ Preminger, Alex and T.V.F. Brogan, et al., editors, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics, 1993, Princeton University Press and MJF Books, "German Poetry" article, "Anthologies in German" section, pp 473-474
- ^ M. L. Rosenthal, The New Poets: American and British Poetry Since World War II, New York: Oxford University Press, 1967, "Selected Bibliography: Individual Volumes by Poets Discussed", pp 334-340
- ^ Preminger, Alex and T.V.F. Brogan, et al., editors, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics, 1993, Princeton University Press and MJF Books, "New Zealand Poetry" article, "History and Criticism" section, p 837
- ^ Hofmann, Michael, editor, Twentieth-Century German Poetry: An Anthology, Macmillan/Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006
- ^ Robinson, Roger and Wattie, Nelson, The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature, 1998, pp. 75-76, "Alan Brunton" article by Peter Simpson
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