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  1. 17 de may. de 2024 · Robert Creeley (born May 21, 1926, Arlington, Massachusetts, U.S.—died March 30, 2005, Odessa, Texas) was an American poet and founder of the Black Mountain movement of the 1950s (see Black Mountain poets).. Creeley dropped out of Harvard University in the last semester of his senior year and spent a year driving a truck in India and Burma (Myanmar) for the American Field Service.

  2. Robert Creeley. , The Art of Poetry No. 10. Interviewed by Lewis MacAdams & Linda Wagner-Martin. Robert Creeley, ca. 1972. Photograph by Elsa Dorfman. This is a composite interview. It combines two separate discussions with Robert Creeley—held at different times, and conducted by two different interviewers: Linda Wagner and Lewis MacAdams, Jr.

  3. 12 de ene. de 2012 · Robert Creeley reads and discusses his poem "The Door" in connection to Charles Olson's idea that poets "do what [they] know before [they] know what [they] d...

  4. Una visita a Robert Creeley. Nota y traducción por Tania Ganitsky*. Estas traducciones del poeta norteamericano Robert Creeley (1926-2005) surgen durante el primer año de mi doctorado. Llego a Creeley en busca de un poeta que, en la línea de Emily Dickinson y Paul Celan, se preocupe por el otro y reflexione sobre la inclinación del lenguaje ...

  5. Robert Creeley is one of the most published and discussed of twentieth-century American poets. However, while numerous critics have noted his use of short form, there has been relatively little discussion of the specific effects of that use of form or its wider implications. Creeley's characteristic clippedness is often used, sometimes with ...

  6. 18 de abr. de 2005 · Robert Creeley, que contribuyó a transformar la poesía estadounidense de posguerra haciéndola más conversacional y emocionalmente directa, murió el mi

  7. Analysis (ai): The poem "America" by Robert Creeley is a powerful indictment of the broken promises and injustices perpetrated by the United States. Creeley's language is stark and unforgiving, reflecting the disillusionment and anger felt by many during the turbulent 1960s. The poem begins with a bitter exclamation, "America, you ode for reality!"