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         Crane Hart:     more books (100)
  1. The Machine that Sings: Modernism, Hart Crane, and the Culture of the Body by Gordon A. Tapper, 2006-09-21
  2. Hart Crane's 'The Bridge': Annotated Edition
  3. Hart Crane - American Writers 47: University of Minnesota Pamphlets on American Writers by MONROE K. SPEARS, 1965-06-21
  4. Rhetoric and Sexuality: The Poetry of Hart Crane, Elizabeth Bishop, and James Merrill by Peter Nickowitz, 2006-02-19
  5. Hart Crane and the Modernist Epic: Canon and Genre Formation in Crane, Pound, Eliot, and Williams by Daniel Gabriel, 2007-01-15
  6. Robber Rocks: Letters and Memories of Hart Crane, 1923-1932 by Susan Jenkins Brown, 1969-01-01
  7. Hart Crane and Allen Tate by Langdon Hammer, 1993-06-01
  8. Hart Crane; a Biographical and Critical Study by Brom, And Crane, Hart Weber, 1970
  9. The complete poems and selected letters and prose of Hart Crane; by Hart Crane, 1968
  10. Hart Crane's Sanskrit Charge: A Study of 'The Bridge' by L.S. Dembo, 1960-01-01
  11. The collected poems of Hart Crane; edited with an introduction by Waldo Frank. by Hart] Crane, 1946
  12. The Collected Poems of Hart Crane (Black and Gold Edition) by Hart Crane, 1946-07-01
  13. The Poems of Hart Crane; Edited By Marc Simon by Hart] [Crane, 1986-01-01
  14. Hart Crane by Brom Weber, 1948

41. Full Text Translator, Language Translation | Free Translations From Dictionary.c
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42. Glbtq >> Literature >> Crane, Hart
A successor to Walt Whitman, Hart Crane found spiritual transcendence in homoerotic desire.
http://www.glbtq.com/literature/crane_h,2.html
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Alpha Index: A-B C-F G-K L-Q ... T-Z Subjects: A-B C-E F-L M-Z
Crane, Hart (1899-1933) page: Unlike many moderns, however, Crane did not repudiate the Romantic tradition of Blake, Shelley, and Keats and, in particular, the American Orphic strain developed by Poe, Whitman, and Melville. Like these Romantics, Crane strove to balance moments of ecstatic consciousness when spiritual transcendence seems within reach against the boundaries of human and material limitations. But for Crane, those moments were primarily sparked by homoerotic relationships, and the boundaries he encountered were society's strictures against homosexuality, for he tightly partitioned his life between the gay and straight worlds. Sponsor Message.

43. Crane, Hart Encyclopedia Topics | Reference.com
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44. Crane, Hart
US poet. His long mystical poem The Bridge (1930) uses the Brooklyn Bridge as a symbolic key to the harmonizing myth of modern America, seeking to link humanity's present with
http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/Hart Crane

45. Crane, Hart (Harper's Magazine)
October 2010. AMERICAN ELECTRA Feminism’s Ritual Matricide By Susan Faludi. THIRTY DAYS AS A CUBAN Pinching Pesos and Dropping Pounds in Havana By Patrick Symmes
http://harpers.org/subjects/HartCrane

46. The Bridge; A Poem. Crane, Hart : Bolerium
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47. Hart Crane (American Poet) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Facts about Crane, Hart, as discussed in Britannica Compton's Encyclopedia Crane, Hart Facts about Crane, Hart American literature, as discussed in Britannica Compton's
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Table of Contents: Hart Crane Article Article Related Articles Related Articles External Web sites External Web sites Citations ARTICLE from the Hart Crane in full Harold Hart Crane The Bridge (1930), was an attempt to create an epic myth of the American experience. As a coherent epic it has been deemed a failure, but many of its individual lyrics are judged to be among the best American poems of the 20th century. New York City and Cleveland and, as his poetry began to be published in little magazines, eventually settled in New York in 1923. The clamourous vitality of urban life impressed him, and he attempted to deal with it in his poetry by insinuating into contemporary things a sense of continuity with an epic past.

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