Everything you need to understand or teach
Margaret Avison.
Products may contain comprehensive summaries, analysis, notes, articles, essays,
lesson plans and more. See below for details on what is included.
Margaret Avison has always been a relatively unknown poet, except among readers and critics of Canadian verse. Since 1966, critical essays on her work have increased, but the verbal and imaginative co...
Read more
Ghiselin is an American educator, poet, essayist, and critic. Below, he reviews Five Poems—a collection of poems that were first published in Poetry in September, 1947—commenting on them...
Read more
Garebian is a Canadian educator and critic. In the following excerpt, he favorably reviews Winter Sun/The Dumbfounding: Poems 1940–1966.
Margaret Avison can be so coolly cerebral, so subtly tec...
Read more
In the following essay, Kertzer examines language and meaning in Avison's poetry.
Surveying the literary scene in 1959, Margaret Avison wrote: "Any Canadian writer, for example, is aware...
Read more
In the essay below, Avison discusses poetry writing, focusing on language, form, and religion.
The impulse to write a poem occurs in human context—and can be a pulsation in darkness or in light...
Read more
In the excerpt below, Lenhart suggests similarities between Avison's work and that of the 17th-century metaphysical and meditational poets.
I was attracted to Margaret Avison's book [Sel...
Read more
In the following review of Selected Poems, Bowering remarks on Avison's place in Canadian literature and the subjects of her poetry.
Margaret Avison's poems were anthologized in A. J. M....
Read more
In the following essay, Calverly provides a detailed reading of "Dispersed Titles."
Margaret Avison likes to challenge her audience with riddling ambiguities. After an initial reading, o...
Read more
In the essay below, Calverley argues that "Snow," "Tennis," "Unbroken Lineage," and "Butterfly Bones" form a sonnet sequence and that Avison...
Read more
In the following essay, Wilson surveys Avison's poetry, remarking on the poet's themes and style and noting her interest in space and perspective.
For most readers of Canadian poetry, Ma...
Read more
New is a Canadian educator, critic, and poet. In the essay below, he discusses theme and style in Avison's poetry, focusing on ambiguity, identity, sense, and perception.
Even with all the inte...
Read more
Bowering is a Canadian poet, novelist, short story writer, and critic. In the following essay, he discusses theme and the image of Christ and the artist presented in Avison's poetry.
In a revie...
Read more
In the following essay, Doerksen focuses on religious and spiritual themes in Avison's work, which he describes as a poetry of "spiritual quest and discovery."
In "Love (II...
Read more
In the essay below, Zezulka provides a thematic analysis of "Dispersed Titles," noting Avison's concern with nature, modern technology, and humankind's place in the world.
...
Read more
In the following essay, Zichy examines style and imagery in several of Avison's poems, focusing on the relationship between confinement and liberation.
My immediate subject is a group of poems ...
Read more
In the essay below, Kertzer provides a thematic analysis of "The Agnes Cleves Papers," focusing on the protagonist's search for meaning.
In a letter [to Cid Corman] of March, 1961...
Read more
Smith was a Canadian educator and poet. Below, he offers a favorable review of Winter Sun, concluding: "rarely has a poet so compactly and richly identified sensation and thought."
In th...
Read more