The Collected Poems Of Wallace Stevens
New York: Random House, 1995. Wallace Stevens, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1955, The Collected Poems stands as a cornerstone of twentieth-century American literature and remains central to discussions of modernist aesthetics and poetic philosophy.
The bindings are tight and square. Text is clean; light, even age-toning. Minimal shelf handling wear. The dust jacket with light shelf handling, no tears or chips has mild sun-fading. 9.5 inches tall; 534 pages followed by an Index of First Lines. 28th Printing.
Published by Knopf and issued during the final year of his life, the volume gathers poems from Harmonium through The Auroras of Autumn, tracing the evolution of a poet deeply concerned with how the imagination shapes and sustains reality. Stevens’s language is at once abstract and sensuous, philosophical yet steeped in sound, color, and image.
Stevens’s significance rests on his insistence that poetry is a vital human act—an ordering force in a world stripped of absolutes. Rather than retreating from modern uncertainty, his poems confront it directly, proposing the imagination as a necessary means of meaning-making. Awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1955, The Collected Poems stands as a cornerstone of twentieth-century American literature and remains central to discussions of modernist aesthetics and poetic philosophy.
Subjects: Imagination and reality, philosophy of poetry, modernism, aesthetics, American lyric poetry, Modernist poetry, twentieth-century American literature.
Item #21374
ISBN: 0394403304
Price: $34.00


