Literary movements are a way to divide literature into categories of similar philosophical, topical, or aesthetic features, as opposed to divisions by genre or period. Like other categorizations, literary movements provide language for comparing and discussing literary works. These terms are helpful for curricula or anthologies.
Some of these movements (such as Dada and Beat) were defined by the members themselves, while other terms (for example, the metaphysical poets) emerged decades or centuries after the periods in question. Further, some movements are well defined and distinct, while others, like expressionism, are nebulous and overlap with other definitions. Because of these differences, literary movements are often a point of contention between scholars.
The list
This is a list of modern literary movements: that is, movements after the Renaissance. Ordering is approximate, as there is considerable overlap.
Movement
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Description
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Notable authors
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Cavalier Poets
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17th-century English royalist poets, writing
primarily about courtly love, called Sons of
Ben (after Ben Jonson)
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Richard Lovelace, William Davenant
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Metaphysical poets
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17th-century English movement using extended conceit,
often (though not always) about religion.
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John Donne, George Herbert, Andrew Marvell
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Amatory fiction
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Romantic fiction popular around 1660 to 1730; notable for
preceding the modern novel form and producing several prominent female
authors
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Eliza Haywood, Delarivier Manley, Aphra Behn
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The Augustans
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18th-century literary movement based chiefly
on classical ideals, satire and skepticism
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Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift
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Sturm und
Drang
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A precursor to the romantic movement, Sturm und
Drang is named for a play by Friedrich Maximilian
Klinger. Sturm and Drang literature often features a protagonist
which is driven by emotion, impulse and other motives that run counter to the
enlightenment rationalism.
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Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Friedrich Schiller
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Romanticism
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19th-century (1800 to 1860) movement emphasizing emotion
and imagination, rather than logic and scientific thought. Response to
the Enlightenment
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Mary Shelley, Victor Hugo,Lord Byron,Camilo Castelo
Branco
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Dark romanticism
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19th-century American movement in reaction to
Transcendentalism. Finds man inherently sinful and self-destructive and
nature a dark, mysterious force
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Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman
Melville, Edwin Arlington Robinson
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American Romanticism
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Distinct from European Romanticism, the American form
emerged somewhat later, was based more in fiction than in poetry, and
incorporated a (sometimes almost suffocating) awareness of history,
particularly the darkest aspects of American history
|
Washington Irving, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ambrose
Bierce
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Gothic novel
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Fiction in which Romantic ideals are combined with an
interest in the supernatural and in violence
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Ann Radcliffe, Bram Stoker,Harper Lee,Edgar Allan Poe
|
Lake Poets
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A group of Romantic poets from the English Lake
District who wrote about nature and the sublime
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William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor
Coleridge, Robert Southey
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Pre-Raphaelitism
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19th-century, primarily English movement based
ostensibly on undoing innovations by the painter Raphael. Many were both
painters and poets
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Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Christina Rossetti
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Transcendentalism
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19th-century American movement: poetry
and philosophyconcerned with self-reliance, independence from
modern technology
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Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau
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Realism
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Late-19th-century movement based on a simplification of
style and image and an interest in poverty and everyday concerns
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Gustave Flaubert, William Dean
Howells, Stendhal,Honoré de Balzac, Leo Tolstoy,Fyodor
Dostoevsky, Frank Norris, Eça de Queiroz
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Naturalism
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Late 19th century. Proponents of this movement
believe heredity and environment control people
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Émile Zola, Stephen Crane, Guy de
Maupassant, Theodore Dreiser
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Verismo
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Verismo is
a derivative of naturalism and realism that began in post-unification
Italy. Verismo literature uses detailed character development based
on psychology, in Giovanni Verga's words 'the science of the human heart.[5]'
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Giovanni Verga, Luigi Capuana, Matilde
Serao, Grazia Deledda
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Socialist Realism
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Socialist realism is a subset of realist art which focuses
on communist values and realist depiction. It developed in
the Soviet Union and was imposed as state policy by Joseph
Stalin in 1934, though authors in other socialist countries and members
of the communist party in non-socialist counties also partook in the movement
|
Maxim Gorky, Nikolai Ostrovsky, Mikhail
Sholokhov, Lu Xun, Takiji Kobayashi, Mike Gold
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Magical Realism
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Literary movement in which magical elements appear in
otherwise realistic circumstances. Most often associated with the Latin
American literary boom of the 20th century
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Gabriel García Márquez, Octavio Paz,Günter
Grass, Julio Cortázar, Sadegh Hedayat, Malay Roy Choudhury
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Decadent movement
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In the mid 19th century, decadence came to refer
to moral decay, and was attributed as the cause of the fall of great
civilizations, like the Roman empire. The decadent movement was a
response to the perceived decadence within the earlier Romantic, naturalist
and realist movements in France at this time. The decadent movement takes
decadence in literature to an extreme, with characters who debase themselves
for pleasure, and the use metaphor, symbolism and language as tools to
obfuscate the truth rather than expose it.
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Joris-Karl Huysmans, Gustav Flaubert, Charles
Baudelaire, Oscar Wilde
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Symbolism
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Principally French movement of the fin de
siècle, symbolism is codified by the Symbolist Manifesto in 1886,
and focused on the structure of thought rather than poetic form or image;
influential for English language poets from Edgar Allan
Poe to James Merrill
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Stéphane Mallarmé, Arthur Rimbaud, Paul Valéry
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Futurism
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Codified in 1909 by the Manifesto of Futurism,
futurism avoids being intellectual and using fixed syntax or style, makes use
of irony and analogy, and is to be written intuitively or from inspiration
|
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Mina Loy, Jaroslav
Seifert
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Stream of consciousness
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Early-20th-century fiction consisting of literary
representations of quotidian thought, without authorial presence
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Virginia Woolf, James Joyce
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Modernism
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Variegated movement of the early 20th century,
encompassing primitivism, formal innovation, or reaction
to science and technology
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Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, H.D.,James
Joyce,Gertrude Stein, Fernando Pessoa, Knut Hamsun
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Expressionism
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Part of the larger expressionist movement, literary
and theatrical expressionism is an avant-garde movement
originating in Germany, which rejects realism in order to depict
emotions and subjective thoughts
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Franz Kafka, Alfred Döblin, Gottfried
Benn,[13] Heinrich Mann, Oskar Kokoschka
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Imagism
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Poetry based on description rather than theme, and on
the motto, "the natural object is always the adequate symbol."
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Ezra Pound, H.D., Richard Aldington
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First World War Poets
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British poets who documented both the idealism and the
horrors of the war and the period in which it took place
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Siegfried Sassoon, Rupert Brooke, Wilfred Owen
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The Lost Generation
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The term 'Lost Generation' is traditionally attributed
to Gertrude Stein and was then popularized by Ernest
Hemingway in the epigraph to his novel The Sun Also
Rises, and his memoir A Moveable Feast. It refers to a group
of American literary notables who lived in Paris and other
parts of Europe from the time period which saw the end
of World War I to the beginning of the Great Depression
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F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Ezra
Pound, Waldo Pierce, John Dos Passos
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Dada
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Touted by its proponents as anti-art, dada focused on
going against artistic norms and conventions
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Kurt Schwitters, Subimal Mishra
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Stridentism
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Mexican artistic avant-garde movement. They
exalted modern urban life and social revolution
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Manuel Maples Arce, Arqueles Vela, Germán List
Arzubide
|
Los Contemporáneos
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A Mexican vanguardist group, active in the
late 1920s and early 1930s; published an eponymous literary
magazine which served as the group's mouthpiece and artistic
vehicle from 1928 to 1931
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Xavier Villaurrutia, Salvador Novo
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Harlem Renaissance
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African American poets, novelists, and thinkers,
often employing elements of blues and folklore, based in
the Harlemneighborhood of New York City in the 1920s
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Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston
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Jindyworobak movement
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The Jindyworobak movement originated in Adelaide,
South Australia during the great depression. It sought to preserve
uniquely Australian culture from external influence by
incorporating Australian aboriginal
languages and mythology and unique Australian settings.
|
Rex Ingamells, Xavier Herbert
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Surrealism
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Originally a French movement, influenced by Surrealist
painting, that uses surprising images and transitions to play off of formal
expectations and depict the unconscious rather
than conscious mind
|
Jean Cocteau, José María Hinojosa Lasarte, André
Breton, Sadegh Hedayat, Mário Cesariny
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Southern Agrarians
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A group of Southern American poets, based originally
at Vanderbilt University, who expressly repudiated many modernist
developments in favor of metrical verse and narrative. Some
Southern Agrarians were also associated with the New Criticism
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John Crowe Ransom, Robert Penn Warren
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Postmodernism
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Postwar movement skeptical of absolutes and embracing
diversity, irony, and word play
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Jorge Luis Borges, Thomas Pynchon, Alasdair
Gray, Samir Roychoudhury, Kurt Vonnegut
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Absurdism
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The absurdist movement is derived from absurdist
philosophy, which argues that life is inherently purposeless and questions
truth and value. As such, asburdist literature and theatre of the
absurd often includes dark humor, satire, and incongruity.[16]
|
Jean-Paul Satre, Samuel Beckett, Albert
Camus, Gao Xingjian
|
Black Mountain Poets
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A self-identified group of poets, originally based
at Black Mountain College, who eschewed patterned form in favor of the
rhythms and inflections of the human voice
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Charles Olson, Denise Levertov, Robert Creeley
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Postcolonialism
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A diverse, loosely connected movement of writers from
former colonies of European countries, whose work is frequently
politically charged
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Jamaica Kincaid, V. S. Naipaul, Derek
Walcott, Salman Rushdie, Giannina Braschi, Wole
Soyinka, Chinua Achebe
|
Hungryalist Poets
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A literary movement in postcolonial India (Kolkata) during
1961–65 as a counter-discourse to Colonial Bengali poetry
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Shakti Chattopadhyay, Malay Roy Choudhury, Binoy
Majumdar, Samir Roychoudhury, Debi Roy,Sandipan
Chattopadhyay, Subimal Basak
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Prakalpana Movement
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This ongoing movement launched in 1969 based in Calcutta,
by the Prakalpana group of Indian writers in Bengali literature, who
created new forms of Prakalpana fiction, Sarbangin poetry and the philosophy
of Chetanavyasism, later it had spread worldwide
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Vattacharja Chandan, Dilip Gupta
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Beat poets
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American movement of the 1950s and 1960s concerned
with counterculture and youthful alienation.
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Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, William S.
Burroughs, Ken Kesey,Gregory Corso
|
Spoken Word
|
A postmodern literary movement where writers use their
speaking voice to present fiction, poetry, monologues, and storytelling
arising from Beat poetry, the Harlem Renaissance, and the civil rights
movement in the urban centers of the United States. The textual origins
differ and may have been written for print initially then read aloud for
audiences
|
Spalding Gray, Laurie Anderson, Hedwig
Gorski, Pedro Pietri, Piri Thomas, Giannina
Braschi, Taalam Acey
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Performance Poetry
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This is the lasting viral component of Spoken Word and
one of the most popular forms of poetry in the 21st century. It is a
new oral poetry originating in the 1980s in Austin, Texas, using
the speaking voice and other theatrical elements. Practitioners write for the
speaking voice instead of writing poetry for the silent printed page. The
major figure is American Hedwig Gorski who began broadcasting live
radio poetry with East of Eden Band during the early 1980s. Gorski,
considered a post-Beat, created the term Performance Poetry to
define and distinguish what she and the band did from performance art.
Instead of books, poets use audio recordings and digital media along with
television spawning Slam Poetry and Def Poets on television and
Broadway
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Beau Sia, Hedwig Gorski, Bob Holman, Marc
Smith, David Antin, Taalam Acey
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Confessional poetry
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Poetry that, often brutally, exposes the self as part of
an aesthetic of the beauty and power of human frailty
|
Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, Alicia Ostriker
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New York School
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Urban, gay or gay-friendly, leftist poets, writers,
and painters of the 1960s
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Frank O'Hara, John Ashbery
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Oulipo
|
Mid-20th-century poetry and prose based on seemingly
arbitrary rules for the sake of added challenge
|
Raymond Queneau, Walter Abish, Georges
Perec, Italo Calvino
|
Spiralism
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A literary movement founded in the late 1960s by René
Philoctète, Jean-Claude Fignolé, and Frankétienne. Spiralism defines life at
the level of relations (colors, odors, sounds, signs, words) and historical
connections
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René Philoctète, Jean-Claude
Fignolé, Frankétienne
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Misty Poets
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The Misty Poets were Chinese poets who resisted
state artistic restrictions imposed during the Cultural Revolution. They
made use of metaphors and hermetic imagery and avoided objective facts.
|
Bei Dao, Gu Cheng, Shu Ting, Yang Lian
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New Formalism
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A late-20th and early 21st century movement in American
poetry advocating a return to traditional accentual-syllabic verse
|
Molly Peacock, Brad Leithauser, Timothy
Steele, Mary Jo Salter
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