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1965 in poetry

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Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

Events

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Works published in English

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Listed by nation where the work was first published (and again by the poet's native land, if different); substantially revised works listed separately:

Australia

Canada

India in English

Ireland

New Zealand

  • Charles Brasch: (year uncertain, but thought to be this year) Twice Sixty, Wellington: Printed at the Wai-te-ata Press (Single poem; broadsheet)[18]
  • Charles Doyle, editor, Recent Poetry in New Zealand, anthology
  • Kendrick Smithyman, A Way of Saying: A Study of New Zealand Poetry,[19] Auckland & London: Collins, criticism

South Africa

United Kingdom

Anthologies

  • P. L. Brent, editor, Young Commonwealth Poets 1965
  • Matthew Hodgart, The Faber Book of Ballads[1]
  • I. M. Parsons, Men Who March Away (poems of World War I)[1]
  • Robin Skelton, Poetry of the Thirties[1]
  • James Reeves, The Cassell Book of English Poetry[1]
  • C. V. Wedgwood, editor, New Poems 1965: A PEN Anthology, London: Hutchinson[21]

Criticism and scholarship in the United Kingdom

United States

Criticism and scholarship in the United States

Other in English

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Works published in other languages

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Perspective

Listed by language and often by nation where the work was first published and again by the poet's native land, if different; substantially revised works listed separately:

Denmark

  • Jørgen Gustava Brandt, Etablissementet[1]
  • Klaus Rifbjerg, Amagerdigle ("Amager Poems")[24]
  • Ivan Malinovski, Poetomatic[1]

Anthologies

  • Poul Borum, editor, a volume of modern poetry[1]
  • Torben Brostrøm, Den nye poesi, a volume of modern poetry (a new version, first published in 1962)[1]
  • Jess Ørnsbo, editor, a volume of modern poetry[1]

Finland

  • Pertti Nieminen, Silmissä maailman maisemat ("The World in his Eyes"), colorful, humorous fables in the form of poetry[1]
  • Arvo Turtainen, translation of Leaves of Grass[1]
  • Pentti Saarikoski, Kuljen missä kuljen ("Traveling Man")[1]

French language

Canada

France

Criticism
  • J. P. Richard, Onze Etudes sur la poésie moderne[1]

Switzerland

Hebrew

  • N. Alterman, Hagigat Kayitz ("Summer Celebration")[1]
  • Yonathan Ratosh, Shirai Memesh ("Poems of Tangibility")[1]
  • Mattityahu Shoham, Ketavim ("Writings")[1]
  • Moshe Dor, Sirpad Umatehet ("Briar and Metal")[1]
  • I. Pincas, Aruhat Erev be-Ferrara ("Supper in Ferrara")[1]
  • A. Broides, le-Eretz ha-Moked ("Toward the Blazing Land")[1]

United States

  • Moses Feinstein, a book of poems and sonnets[1]
  • G. Preil, Mivhar Shirim ("A Selection of Poems"), introduction by A. Shabatay[1]
  • Yaffa Eliach, Eishet ha-Dayag ("Fisherman's Wife"), a long, narrative poem[1]
  • A. Zeitlin, Hazon ve-Hazon Medinah ("A State and a State Envisioned")[1]

India

Listed in alphabetical order by first name:

Italy

  • Alfredo Giuliani:
    • Povera Juliet, a complete collection of his poetry[1]
    • editor, Novissimi, a new and enlarged edition of the 1961 anthology-cum-manifesto "increasingly regarded as the principal event in Italian poetry in recent times"[1]
  • Roberto Roversi, Dopo Campoformio, collection[1]
  • Carlo Villa, Siamo esseri antichi[1]
  • Vittorio Sereni, Gli strumenti umani[1]
  • Giovanni Giudici, La vita in versi[1]

Portuguese

Brazil

Criticism

Spanish

Spain

Latin America

  • Victor García Robles, Oíd Mortales (Argentina), winner of the Cuban Casa de las Américas Prize in poetry
  • J. Bañuelos, O. Oliva, J. A. Shelley, E. Zepeda, and J. Labastida (all in Mexico), Ocupación de la palabra, a collection of their poems
  • Carlos Medellín, El aire y las colinas (Colombia)
Criticism
  • José Emilio Pacheco, Poesía mexicana del siglo XIX, which Jose Francisco Vazquez-Amaral called (in 1966) "the first reliable work of its kind to deal with that important period of Mexican poetry".[1]

Yiddish

  • editor(s) not known, Horizons, a poetry anthology published in the Soviet Union[1]
  • Kadia Molodowsky, Light from the Thorn Tree[1]
  • Berish Vaynshteyn, Destined Poems[1]
  • Robert Frost, a volume of his poems in Yiddish (published in Israel), translated by Meyer-Ziml Tkatsh[1]
  • Leyb Olitski [pl; he], a book of poems (published in Israel)[1]
  • Arye Shamri [he], a book of poems (published in Israel)[1]
  • Moshe Yungman [he], a book of poems (published in Israel)[1]
  • Leyzer Aykhenrand [de], a book of poems (published in Israel)[1]
  • Malka Heifetz Tussman, a book of poems (published in Israel)[1]

Other

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Awards and honors

Canada

United Kingdom

United States

Other

  • Danish Academy 1965 literature prize: Erik Knudsen, poet and dramatist
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Births

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Deaths

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Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:

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See also

Notes

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