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1964 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

  • March 23 – A surprise best-seller in the United Kingdom is John Lennon's In His Own Write, a compendium of nonsense writing, sketches and drawings by one of the Beatles, published today.[1][2]
  • March 29 (Easter Day) – Adrian Mitchell reads "To Whom It May Concern" to Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament protesters in Trafalgar Square, London.
  • April 23 – The "Shakespeare Quartercentenary", the 400th anniversary of the birth of William Shakespeare falling around this date, is celebrated throughout the year in lecture series, exhibitions, dramatic and musical programs and other events as well as special publications (Shakespeare issues and supplements), reprinting of standard works on the playwright and poet, and the issue of commemorative postage stamps. The American Association of Advertising Agencies suggests that Shakespeare quotations should be used in advertisements. Celebrations of various kinds occur in the United Kingdom, the United States, France, Germany, Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and elsewhere.[1] The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust opens the Shakespeare Centre, housing its library and research facilities, in Stratford-upon-Avon (England).
  • June
    • The 75th birthday of Anna Akhmatova, who was severely persecuted during the Stalin era, is celebrated around this time with special observances and the publication of new collections of her verse.[1]
    • After the murder of American civil rights activist Andrew Goodman, poet Mary Doyle Curran finds and publishes a poem he had written for her college class, "A Corollary to a Poem by A. E. Housman."[3]
  • December – Poetry Australia literary magazine founded.
  • John Berryman's 77 Dream Songs, published this year, wins the 1965 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry.
  • Russian poet Joseph Brodsky is convicted of "parasitism" in a Soviet court, which sends him into exile near the Arctic Circle.
  • Among the many books of poetry published this year, Robert Lowell's For the Union Dead is greeted with particular acclaim. The book is received with "general jubilation" from critics, according to Raymond Walters Jr., associate editor of the New York Times Book Review. "These verses [...] convinced many observers that its author was now the pre-eminent U.S. poet."[1]
  • The publication in the United Kingdom of The Complete Poems of D. H. Lawrence in two volumes is "a major publishing event of 1964".[1]
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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

Anthologies in Canada

  • Poetry of Mid-Century 1940/1960, edited by Milton Wilson, included the work of 10 well-known Canadian poets:[1]

Criticism, scholarship and biography in Canada

  • Northrop Frye, Fables of Identity, 16 essays on "various works and authors in the central tradition of English mythopoeic poetry"[1]
  • Roy Daniells, Milton, Mannerism and Baroque[1]

India, in English

New Zealand

United Kingdom

Criticism, scholarship, and biography in the United Kingdom

  • Poetry of the Thirties, a Penguin Books anthology; including the last published appearance during the lifetime of W. H. Auden of his, "September 1, 1939", a poem which he was famous for, but which he hated; the poem appeared in the edition with a note about this and four other early poems: "Mr. W. H. Auden considers these five poems to be trash which he is ashamed to have written."
  • G. Hartmann, Wordsworth's Poetry, 1787-1814[19]

United States

Criticism, scholarship, and biography in the United States

Other in English

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Works in other languages

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Perspective

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

Danish

French

Canada, in French

France

Anthologies

  • J. L. Bédouin, editor, La Poésie surréaliste[1]
  • G. E. Clancier, editor, Panorama critique de Chénier á Baudelaire[1]

German

Hebrew

  • Yaakov Cahan, the collected works[1]
  • Esther Rab, Shirai-[1]
  • Leah Goldberg, Im ha-Laila Hazeh ("On This Night")[1]
  • Daliah Rivikovich, Horef Kasheh ("Hard Winter")[1]
  • Dan Pagis, Shehut Mauhereth ("Belated Lingering")[1]
  • David Avidan, Masheu Bishvil Mishehu ("Something for Someone")[1]
  • Amir Gilboa, Kehulim Vaadumin ("The Blues and the Reds")[1]
  • Eldad Andan, Lo Bishmahot kalot ("Not with Joys Lightly")[1]
  • B. Mordecai, Nefilim ba-Aretz ("Giants on Earth")[1]
  • Aaron Zeitlin, Min ha-Adam Vomaila ("From Man and Higher"), comprising two dramatic poems by this American publishing in Israel[1]
  • Chaim Brandwein, be-Tzel ha-Argaman ("In the Shadow of the Purple"), a first book of poems by this American publishing in Israel[1]
  • Abraham Regelson, Hakukot Otiotaich ("Engraved Are Thy Letters"), by an American poet living in Israel[1]

Italian

  • Bartolo Cattafi, L'osso, l'anima[1]
  • Corrado Costa, Pseudobaudelaire avant-garde poetry[1]
  • Eugenio Miccini, Sonetto minore avant-garde poetry[1]
  • Elio Pagliarani, La lezione di fisica avant-garde poetry[1]
  • Pier Paulo Pasolini, Poesia in forma di rosa[1]
  • Lamberto Pignotti, La nozione dell'uomo avant-garde poetry[1]
  • Antonio Porta, Aprire avant-garde poetry[1]
  • Edoardo Sanguineti, Triperuno avant-garde poetry[1]
  • Cesare Vivaldi, Dettagli avant-garde poetry[1]
  • Gruppo '63 (published this spring), an anthology of poems, critical essays, and passages from plays and novels by writers who had rebelled in recent years against standard conventions in literature.[1]

Norwegian

Russian

Portuguese language

Brazil

Spanish language

Latin America

Anthologies
  • Instituto Torcuato Di Tella, Poesía argentina (sic), including selections from 10 Argentinian poets, most born in the 1920s or later[1]
  • Oscar Echeverri Mejía and Alfonso Bonilla-Naar, editors, 21 años de poesía colombiana (sic), with poems from the more prominent Colombian poets in the two decades from 1942 to 1963[1]
Criticism, scholarship, and biography in Latin America

Spain

Criticism, scholarship and biography in Spain

Yiddish

Other

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Awards and honors

Australia

Canada

United Kingdom

United States

Other

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Births

Deaths

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

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See also

Notes

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