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The Beauty of Living

E. E. Cummings in the Great War

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Intimate and richly detailed, The Beauty of Living begins with E. E. Cummings's Cambridge upbringing and his relationship with his socially progressive but domestically domineering father. It follows Cummings through his undergraduate experience at Harvard, where he fell into a circle of aspiring writers including John Dos Passos, who became a lifelong friend. Steeped in classical paganism and literary Decadence, Cummings and his friends rode the explosion of Cubism, Futurism, Imagism, and other "modern" movements in the arts. As the United States prepared to enter World War I, Cummings volunteered as an ambulance driver, shipped out to Paris, and met his first love, Marie Louise Lallemand, who was working in Paris as a prostitute. Soon after reaching the front, however, he was unjustly imprisoned in a brutal French detention center at La Ferte-Mace. Through this confrontation with arbitrary and sadistic authority, he found the courage to listen to his own voice. Probing an underexamined yet formative time in the poet's life, this deeply researched account illuminates his ideas about love, justice, humanity, and brutality. J. Alison Rosenblitt weaves together letters and journal entries with astute analyses of poems that span Cummings's career, revealing the origins of one of the twentieth century's most famous poets.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 13, 2020
      Classics scholar Rosenblitt (E.E. Cummings’ Modernism and the Classics) reframes avant-gardist E.E. Cummings (1894–1962) as a war poet in this incisive biography. Looking first at Cummings’s upbringing and education, Rosenblitt then focuses on his experiences during WWI as a volunteer ambulance driver on the Western Front and being imprisoned by the French as an “undesirable” and suspected spy. Rosenblitt argues that Cummings’s exposure in France to a new artistic atmosphere and to wartime brutality indelibly shaped his poetry and pacifism. Her richest observations concern Cummings’s psychological motivations, including his rebelliousness against his formidable and powerful father; his loyalty to his friend William Slater Brown, with whom he was imprisoned; and his love affair with the French prostitute Marie Louise. While there is no shortage of biographies that focus on Cummings as a mature, world-famous poet, Rosenblitt offers a fuller picture of the significance of his early years. Scholars and students of 20th-century literature will appreciate this illuminating look at how Cummings acquired his “fearlessness” as a writer from “facing both the cruel and the tender sides of human experience.” Photos.

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