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Search "John Gould Fletcher"
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John Gould Fletcher | |
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About 22 pages (6,448 words) in 3 products |
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| Name: |
John Gould Fletcher | | Birth Date: |
January 3, 1886 | | Death Date: |
May 10, 1950 | | Nationality: |
American | | Gender: |
Male |
summary from source:

Biography of John Gould Fletcher
688 words, approx. 2 pages
 Nijinsky's ballet, Stravinsky's music, and the city of Paris all helped create John Gould Fletcher's "first period of full poetic inspiration." The Sacre de Printemps (1913) confirmed his determination to become a modern poet, rebelling against...
summary from source:

Biography of John Gould Fletcher
5,383 words, approx. 18 pages
 John Gould Fletcher was associated with two major groups of poets: Amy Lowell's imagists and the Southern renaissance group The Fugitives. He was, however, a rugged individualist, who believed that as a modern writer he must be open to every kind of...


Encyclopedia and Summary Information
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John Gould Fletcher Information
377 words, approx. 1 pages
 John Gould Fletcher (January 3 1886 – May 20 1950) was a Pulitzer Prize winning Imagist poet and author. He was born in Little Rock, Arkansas to a socially prominent family. After attending Phillips Academy, Andover Fletcher went on to Harvard...



summary from source:
 The Mississippi Quarterly
John Gould Fletcher and Southern Modernism. (book reviews)
12/22/1993: 2,213 words, approx. 7 pages John Gould Fletcher is best known as an expatriate residing in London who first achieved fame as one of the Imagist poets and later as one of the Nashville Fugitives. Subsequently, he contributed an essay on Southern education to the Agrarian manifesto, 171...
summary from source:
 The Mississippi Quarterly
Where No Flag Flies: The Correspondence of Donald Davidson and John Gould Fletcher.
03/22/1999: 3,474 words, approx. 12 pages Issues discussed concern the relationship and correspondence between US Southern poets Donald Davidson and John Gould Fletcher. Topics addressed include the poets' participation in a poetic association called the Fugitives, and their poetic response to Southern culture in the aftermath of the Civil War....


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John Gould Fletcher | |
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About 22 pages (6,448 words) in 3 products |
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