Modernism Archive, August 1997: Re: Mina Loy Re mina loy Michael Thurston (michael.thurston@yale.edu) Sat, 23 Aug 1997 230940 0400 Maybe in reply to Jack Kolb mina loy . http://www.liquidsquid.com/modernism/mod/0897/0030.html
UPNE | Mina Loy National Poetry Foundation. mina loy Woman and Poet Shreiber, Maeera, and Keith Tuma, eds. mina loy made a career of friendship. http://www.upne.com/0-943373-42-5.html
Extractions: Mina Loy: Woman and Poet represents the first substantial collection of criticism devoted to this long neglected major Modernist poet. The recent publication of the new collected edition of Loy's poetry under her own title, The Last Lunar Baedeker, along with a well-received critical biography by Carolyn Burke, has reawakened interest in her work. This collection draws together essays from a prominent group of international poetry scholars, including Rachel Blau DuPlessis, Marjorie Perloff, Peter Quartermain, Kathleen Fraser, and Barbara Guest, along with a previously unpublished interview with Loy and an annotated bibliography of works by and about Loy. Mina Loy made a career of friendship. She was an active participant in the Futurist movement in Italy before World War I. During the war years she became a friend and associate of William Carlos Williams and other writers associated with New York Dada. And in the 1920s, she was a vivid presence in the Paris literary scene. Her poems during these years were saluted by many critics, including Ezra Pound, who linked her to Marianne Moore. But in the 1930s she gradually disappeared from sight, and she is the last major Modernist poet to be recovered.
In-Conference -- Mina Loy -- HOW2 INCONFERENCE. mina loy A SYMPOSIUM Papers delivered at the Institute of English StudiesSchool of Advanced studies, University of London, on 11 March 2000 http://www.scc.rutgers.edu/however/v1_5_2001/current/in-conference/mina-loy/
Mina Loy Chronology mina loy Chronology. b. London, Dec 27, 1882 as mina Lowy. Art student in London, Germany, Paris. 1903 In Paris met and married another http://www.missouri.edu/~engtim/loy.html
Extractions: (3 children: Ada Janet, 1904-05; Joella Synara, 1907-; Giles, 1909-1923) 1906 Loy and Haweis exhibited in Salon d'Automne 1907-16 Residence in Italy, particularly Florence 1913 Haweis leaves for Australia and South Seas via N. Y. and the Bahamas 1913-14 Close relationships with Futurists: Carlo Carra, Filippo Marinetti and Giovanni Papini (the latter founded the Futurust journal Lacerba in 1913) Summer 1914 Recovers from psychological breakdown in Vallombrosa; affair with Marinetti Winter 1915 Volunteer in a surgical hospital in Florence July 1915 Publication of "Love Songs" in Others: A Magazine of the New Verse causes what the editor, Arthur Kreymborg, described as a "small-size riot" 1916 Travels without children to New York, meets Arthur Cravan, Dadaist poet, photographer and boxer 1917 Receives divorce from Haweis Jan. 1918 Marries Cravan in Mexico City; Cravan disappears in Mexico April 1919 Daughter Jemima Fabienne (Fabi) born; searches for Cravan in Europe and America; residence in N. Y., where she paints and writes poetry and plays
IPL Online Literary Criticism Collection To the lobby of the Internet Public Library. Online Literary Criticism Collection. mina loy (1882 1966). Criticism about mina loy. Sorry. http://www.ipl.org.ar/cgi-bin/ref/litcrit/litcrit.out.pl?au=loy-613
Portraits De Personnages Celebres : LOY Translate this page loy (mina Gertrude Lowy dite mina)(1882-1966) Photo 1/2/3 Photo de groupe - enfant 1 (à droite, avec sa soeur Dora et sa mère Julia) - avec Constantin http://www.onlipix.com/personnages/loy.htm
SALON Daily Clicks: Sneak Peeks BECOMING MODERN The Life of mina loy By Carolyn Burke, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 400 pages. Her contemporaries considered mina http://www.salon.com/sneaks/sneakpeeks960708.html
Extractions: H er contemporaries considered Mina Loy to be one of the great Modernist poets, as well as perhaps the first "Modern woman." After decades of obscurity, her recent "rediscovery" poses a peculiar challenge for readers of poetry and redressers of history. Will her dazzling and far more easily apprehended legend-in-the-making that of a glamorous bohemian chameleon whose friends and admirers included Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, Djuna Barnes, Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp overshadow the formidably difficult brilliance of her work? To read Burke's lush, nuanced biography is to marvel at how aptly Loy served as a "cartographer of the imagination" in the post-Victorian era: her hand sculpted burgeoning movements from feminism to Futurism. She had an impeccable instinct for being at the right place at the right time. Her strict religious upbringing in late 19th-century London gave her cause for rebellion, and she escaped to study art in Surrealist Paris where she married and had children. Later she settled in Florence and had a tumultuous affair with the Futurist theorist F.T. Marinetti. When she moved to Dadaist New York, her reputation as a "shocking" and even obscene poet preceded her. (That reputation wasn't dented when she followed her notorious true love, the poet-boxer Arthur Cravan, to revolutionary Mexico in 1917.) Loy made a living creating ethereal objets d'art in post-war Europe and spent her later years (she died in 1966) living, painting, and writing poetry on New York's Bowery with the bums for her muses.
Extractions: The daughter of a second-generation Hungarian Jewish father and an English mother, Mina Gertrude Lowry was born in London and began her career as a visual artist, exhibiting her paintings in the Salon d'Automne show in Paris, 1905. A cosmopolitan modernist, she spent time in England, Paris, and Florence before moving to the United States. In 1903, at the time she married the photographer and writer Stephen Haweis, she shortened the spelling of her name to become Mina Loy. Between 1904 and 1907 she had three children and was an active friend to fellow modernists Gertrude Stein and Mabel Dodge in whose salons she met such figures as the cubist painter Pablo Picasso, John Reed, and Carl Van Vechten. By 1913, Loy was emerging as a modern artist in her own right, in part through her connections to Italian Futurists such as Filippo Marinetti and through her published verse in Alfred Steiglitz's stylish journal
Buchanan International PsychoDemocracy mina loy as Revolutionary Ironist. Anarchists in art are art s instantaneous aristocracy mina loy. http://www.ags.uci.edu/~clcwegsa/revolutions/Buchanan.htm
Extractions: University of Texas-Austin " Anarchists in art are art's instantaneous aristocracy "Mina Loy Literary Modernism was one of the few times in the history of American literature in which writers and artists explicitly sought, through their own creative projects, to effect social and economic upheaval. Mina Loy, whose work is now being rediscovered with the recent republication of The Last Lunar Baedeker and recent publication of a biography, was one of the more radical thinkers and writers of her era. This paper will first examine Loy's political writings, specifically her political tract, "International PsychoDemocracy," in which she argues to enact a revolution one must control language. Loy anticipates, by at least half a decade, subsequent discourse theorists who argue in the same vein. Equally dynamic is her "Feminist Manifesto" in which she employs the lessons on language from "International PsychoDemocracy." "International PsychoDemocracy" at its most basic level argues that those who control language and, thus, ways in which we think, shape modes of action. Loy divides class according to those who control language and those who are subjected to this control. She labels the two classes: the dominated and the dominators. The dominators are those who dictate social ideals, tastes and customs. The dominated are those who feel a tension between their minds' innate logic and the seemingly incongruous social ideals dictated by the dominated. Thus, to engender social change or revolution, the dominated must seize control of language. Those who are most effective and powerful at reshaping vocabularies and, by extension, modes of thought are artists. Thus, Loy believes it is the artist's responsibility to disrupt received vocabularies. She argues for continual disruption in order to avoid a simple inversion between dominated and dominator.
Cappelen Katalog - Lyrikk Oppl. dato 10.09.98 ISBN 8202174910 Bokmål Heftet Kr 169, Legg i handlekurven, kan fjernes senere Om forfatteren, loy, mina Engelsk kjøter http://www.cappelen.no/main/katalog.asp?f=1106&ISBN=8202174910
The Salt Companion To Mina Loy EAN13 9781876857721 ISBN 1876857722 Author Rachel Potter Title The Salt Companion to mina loy Series Salt Companions to Poetry Product class BC Language http://www.saltpublishing.com/books/scp/1876857722.htm
Extractions: //Required //var site = '681666'; //var mnum = '139010'; //Not Required var max_words = 3; var max_links_per_word = 4; var link_color = '0107A1'; var boxbg_color = 'FFFAEA'; var boxtitle_color = 'black'; var boxdesc_color = 'black'; var boxurl_color = 'red'; DR. ELLIOT'S NORTH AMERICAN GREAT BOOKS TOURCOMING TO A BOOK STORE NEAR YOU Classical Art and Architecture Ports Futurism , Camille arro, Alfred Sisley, , Guillaumin and Berthe Morisot, Impressionism,, Guillaumin and Berthe Morisot, Camille arro, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Filippos Tomo Marinetti, Impressionism, Claude Monet, Pierre Auguste Renoir, Camille arro, Alfred Sisley, Berthe Morisot, Armand Guillaumin, Fredric Bazille, arro, Monet, Sisley, Degas, Renoir, Czann, , Guillaumin and Berthe Morisot, Renoir, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, , , Renoir, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Filippos Tomo Marinetti, Impressionism, Claude Monet, Pierre Auguste Renoir, Camille arro, Alfred Sisley, Berthe Morisot, Armand Guillaumin, Fredric Bazille, arro, Monet, Sisley, Degas, Renoir, Czann, , Guillaumin and Berthe Morisot
Extractions: //Required //var site = '681666'; //var mnum = '139010'; //Not Required var max_words = 3; var max_links_per_word = 4; var link_color = '0107A1'; var boxbg_color = 'FFFAEA'; var boxtitle_color = 'black'; var boxdesc_color = 'black'; var boxurl_color = 'red'; DR. ELLIOT'S NORTH AMERICAN GREAT BOOKS TOURCOMING TO A BOOK STORE NEAR YOU : I just wanted to bring attention to a forgotten dadaist, Mina Loy, you guys should search her up if interested on the internet : i refuse to give you the dirsect address, but the internet makes peole lazy enough as it is : also, i am interested in any biographical information anyone could give me on the holy Tristan Tzara, especially regarding the years before zurich Optional Link URL:
Mina Translate this page mina loy - The Academy of American Poets mina loy The Academy of American Poets presents biographies, photographs, selected poems, and links as part of its http://www.win.it/ricerca/m/mina.html
Maeera Schreiber: U. Of U. English Dept. Poetry. Editor, with Yopie Prins. Cornell University Press, 1997 mina loy Woman and Poet. Editor, with Keith Tuma. Forthcoming http://www.hum.utah.edu/english/faculty/schreiber.html
Welcome To Carcanet List of Titles. The Lost Lunar Baedeker PB; The Lost Lunar Baedeker PB. mina loy. To link directly to this page, please use the following http://www.carcanet.co.uk/scripts/webguild/scribe.cgi?author=loym
Kurt: Mina Loy March 23, 2004. mina loy. LOVE of others is the appreciation of one s self. Aphorisms on Futurism mina loy, writer/poet (18821966). quote via Sandeep Parmar. http://interactive.usc.edu/members/kurt/archives/001906.html
CheatHouse.com - An Explication Of Mina Loy's Poem "Lunar Baedeker". Let s start with the title, shall we? Lunar Baedeker, the word lunar means An explication of mina loy s poem Lunar Baedeker . Note! http://www.cheathouse.com/eview/21883-an-explication-of-mina-loy-s-poem-lunar.ht
Extractions: When read top to bottom, Mina Loy's poem "Lunar Baedeker" may sound like a story of drugs, sex, and desperation. In reality, it is an encrypted biography of part of Loy's life, as well as symbolic of the cycles of life. Let's start with the title, shall we? "Lunar Baedeker," the word 'lunar' means Note! The sentences in this essay are shuffled, making this essay unusable
Literary Modernisms: Bibliography Burke, Carolyn. Becoming Modern The Life of mina loy. New York Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1996. 4568. loy, mina. The Lost Lunar Baedeker Poems. Ed. http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~rpappas/Lit_Mod/ModBib.html
Extractions: Literary Modernisms: Bibliography Bibliography Benstock, Shari, ed. Feminist Issues in Literary Scholarship . Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987. Women of the Left Bank . Austin: University of Texas Press, 1986. Benstock, Shari. "Expatriate Sapphic Modernism: Entering Literary History." Rereading Modernism . Ed. Lisa Rado. 97-122. Bland, Lucy and Laura Doan, eds. Sexology Uncensored: The Documents of Sexual Science . Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998. Buck, Claire. "'O Careless, Unspeakable Mother': Irigaray, H. D. and Maternal Origin." Sellers. 129-142.