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This page indexes the individual year in poetry, the "decade in poetry" and the "century in poetry" pages. These pages are intended to supplement the List of years in literature pages with a special focus on events in the history of poetry. To access these pages by way of a single chart, please see the Centuries in poetry page. This page indexes the individual year in literature pages. ...
These pages contain the trends of millennia and centuries in poetry. ...
2000s - 1990s - 1980s - 1970s - 1960s - 1950s - 1940s - 1930s - 1920s - 1910s - 1900s - 1890s - 1880s - 1870s - 1860s- 1850s - 1830s - 1820s - 1810s - 1800s - 1790s - 1780s - 1770s - 1760s - 1750s - 1740s - 1650s - 1590s - 1510s - 1470s - 1450s - 1440s - 1430s - 1420s - 1410s - 1370s - 990s - 980s - 970s - 960s - 950s - 940s - 930s - 920s - 910s - 900s - 890s - 880s - 870s - 860s - 850s - 830s - 820s - 810s 21st century in poetry Category: ...
2000s
20th century in poetry // French public notary Patrick Huet unveils Pieces of Hope to the Echo of the World in Lyon. ...
// Frank Bidart: Star Dust, one of the New York Times 100 Notable Books of the Year[1] Dan Chiasson: Natural History: Poems, one of the New York Times 100 Notable books of the year[1] Jorie Graham: Overlord: Poems, one of the New York Times 100 Notable books of the...
// Rita Dove, American Smooth: Poems (Norton); named a notable book of the year by The New York Times Book Review Donald Justice, Collected Poems (Knopf); published posthumously; named a notable book of the year by The New York Times Book Review Michael Ryan, New And Selected Poems Derek Walcott, The...
// Chuck Palahniuk reads his short story Guts to audiences while on tour to promote his novel Diary. ...
// March 16: Authorities in Saudi Arabia arrested and jailed poet Abdul Mohsen Musalam and fired a newspaper editor following the publication of Musalams poem The Corrupt on Earth that criticized the states Islamic judiciary. ...
// Griffin Poetry Prize is established, with one award given each year for the best work by a Canadian poet and one award given for best work in the English language internationally. ...
Category: ...
1990s // Anne Carson, Autobiography of Red: A Novel in Verse, (Knopf) ; named a notable book of the year by The New York Times Book Review Ted Hughes, Birthday Letters, (Farrar, Straus & Giroux); named a notable book of the year by The New York Times Book Review Mark Strand, Blizzard of One...
// January 20 â Miller Williams of Arkansas reads his poem, Of History and Hope, at President Clintons inauguration. ...
// In the film Four Weddings and a Funeral, directed by Mike Newell, W.H. Audens Stop all the clocks is read as a eulogy. ...
// Nobel prize: Derek Walcott C. J. Dennis Prize for Poetry: Robert Harris, Jane, Interlinear and Other Poems Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry: Elizabeth Riddell, Selected Poems Mary Gilmore Prize: Alison Croggon - This is the Stone See 1992 Governor Generals Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for...
// Allen Ginsberg crowned Majelis King in Prague on May Day Maya Angelou, I Shall Not be Moved Derek Walcott, Omeros C. J. Dennis Prize for Poetry: Robert Adamson, The Clean Dark Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry: Robert Adamson, The Clean Dark Mary Gilmore Prize: Kristopher Rassemussen - In the Name of...
1980s // Dead Poets Society, a film with excerpts from many traditional poets, ending with the title and opening line of Walt Whitmans lament on the death of Abraham Lincoln, O Captain! My Captain! My Left Foot, a film about Christy Brown, the Irish poet, and based on his autobiography Edward...
// Joseph Brodsky, To Urania Federico GarcÃa Lorca, Poeta en Nueva York first translation into English as A Poet in New York this year (written in 1930, first published posthumously in 1940) Philip Larkin, Collected Poems Michael Palmer, Sun The New British Poetry, a poetry anthology, jointly edited by Gillian...
// Charles Bukowski, fictionalised as alter ego Henry Chinaski, becomes the subject of the film Barfly starring Mickey Rourke. ...
// March 4 - President Ronald Reagan publicly recites from memory lines from Robert Services The Cremation of Sam McGee Wendy Cope, Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis a best-seller December 18 Pforzheimer Collection of the works of Percy Bysshe Shelley and his circle donated to the New York Public Library...
// December 19 - Philip Larkin turns down the British Poet Laureateship, and Ted Hughes becomes Poet Laureate. ...
// Maya Angelou, Shaker, Why Dont You Sing? Elizabeth Bishop, Collected Poems 1927-1979 (posthumous) Amy Clampitt, Kingfisher Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), Collected Poems, 1912â1944 (posthumous) Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry: Vivian Smith, Tide Country See 1983 Governor Generals Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists...
// Final issue of L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E Magazine published. ...
1970s // Kingsley Amis - Collected Poems Ted Hughes - Moor Town Craig Raine - A Martian Sends a Postcard Home See 1979 Governor Generals Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards. ...
// British publication Gay News successfully prosecuted in the United Kingdom for blasphemy and libel for publishing James Kirkups The Love that Dares to Speak its Name Samuel Beckett, Collected Poems in English and French Elizabeth Bishop, Geography III, which includes In the Waiting Room, The Moose, and the villanelle...
// Two poems written in 1965 by Mao Zedong just before the Cultural Revolution, including Two Birds: A Dialogue, are published on January 1[1] Elizabeth Bishop, One Act Marya Fiamengo, In Praise of Older Women Thom Gunn, Jack Straws Castle Derek Walcott, Sea Grapes James Merrill: Divine Comedies, including...
// The Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics is founded by Allen Ginsberg and Anne Waldman. ...
// Adrienne Rich, Rape Derek Walcott, Another Life See 1973 Governor Generals Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards. ...
// Charles Causley, Figgie Hobbin See 1970 Governor Generals Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards. ...
1960s // FIELD Magazine founded Charles Bukowski quits his day job as a Post Office clerk in Los Angeles to embark on a writing career after being promised a $100 stipend from Black Sparrow Press. ...
// Charles Causley, Underneath the Water Rod McKuen - Lonesome Cities Black Fire, edited by LeRoi Jones and Larry Neal, an anthology of African American poetry See 1968 Governor Generals Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards. ...
// Cecil Day-Lewis is selected as the new Poet Laureate of the UK. Margaret Atwood, The Circle Game Ted Hughes, Wodwo Wole Soyinka, Idanre, and Other Poems See 1967 Governor Generals Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards. ...
// Meic Stephens founds Poetry Wales Russian poet Anna Akhmatova was allowed to travel outside the Soviet Union to Sicily and England in order to receive the Taormina prize and an honorary doctoral degree from Oxford University Randall Jarrell, Little Friend, Little Friend Seamus Heaney, Death of a Naturalist Philip Larkin...
// Sir John Betjeman, Ring of Bells Leonard Cohen, Flowers for Hitler, including The Only Tourist in Havana Turns his Thoughts Homeward Philip Larkin, The Whitsun Weddings. ...
// Eric Gregory Award: Donald Thomas, James Simmons, Brian Johnson (poet, Jenny Joseph Queens Gold Medal for Poetry: Christopher Fry National Book Award for Poetry: Alan Dugan, Poems Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Alan Dugan: Poems Poetry List of poetry awards Categories: | ...
// Eric Gregory Award: Adrian Mitchell, Geoffrey Hill National Book Award for Poetry: Randall Jarrell, The Woman at the Washington Zoo Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Phyllis McGinley: Times Three: Selected Verse From Three Decades Poetry List of poetry awards Categories: | ...
// Eric Gregory Award: Christopher Levenson Queens Gold Medal for Poetry: John Betjeman National Book Award for Poetry: Robert Lowell, Life Studies Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: W. D. Snodgrass: Hearts Needle January 14 - Ralph Chubb Poetry List of poetry awards Categories: | ...
1950s // Aldous Huxley turns down the offer of a knighthood. ...
// Queens Gold Medal for Poetry: Francis Cornford American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal in Poetry: Conrad Aiken National Book Award for Poetry: Robert Penn Warren, Promises: Poems, 1954-1956 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Stanley Kunitz, Selected Poems 1928-1958 April 15 - Benjamin Zephaniah, British dub poet March...
// Howl obscenity trial in San Francisco brings significant attention to beat poetry, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Allen Ginsburg National Book Award for Poetry: Richard Wilbur, Things of this World Pulitzer Prize for poetry -- Things of This World by Richard Wilbur Queens Gold Medal for Poetry: Siegfried Sassoon Li-Young Lee...
// City Lights Books publishes Howl and Other Poems by Allen Ginsburg Aniara - Harry Martinson National Book Award for Poetry: W.H. Auden, The Shield of Achilles Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Elizabeth Bishop: Poems - North & South Queens Gold Medal for Poetry: Edmund Blunden date unknown - Amy Gerstler, poet June 22...
// Bad Lord Byron, a film directed by David Macdonald about the Romantic poet W.H. Auden, Nones Charles Causley, Farewell Aggie Weston Hugh Kenner, The Poetry of Ezra Pound, highly influential in causing a re-assessment of Pounds poetry Robert Lowell, The Mills of the Kavanaughs Peter Mason Opie...
// In 1950, Charles Olson published his seminal essay, Projective Verse. ...
1940s // Carlos de Oliveira - Descida aos Infernos Judith Wright, Woman to Man Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), By Avon River Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress (later the post would be called Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress): Elizabeth Bishop appointed this year. ...
// Sometime this year, Jack Kerouac introduced the phrase Beat Generation to describe his friends and as a general term describing the underground, anti-conformist youth gathering in New York at that time to the novelist John Clellon Holmes September â The body of William Butler Yeats who died in Menton, France...
// Dorothy Parker divorces Alan Campbell for the first time. ...
// W.H. Auden becomes a U.S. citizen Cleanth Brooks, The Well Wrought Urn: Studies in the Structure of Poetry Roy Campbell, Talking Bronco Walter De la Mare, The Traveller Henry Reed, A Map of Verona, including Naming of Parts Dylan Thomas, Deaths and Entrances, including Fern Hill and A...
// Benjamin Brittens opera Peter Grimes, based on George Crabbes The Borough Vladimir Nabokov becomes a naturalized citizen of the United States Ezra Pound is arrested for treason at Genoa and imprisoned at Pisa by the U.S. Army W.H. Auden, Collected Poems Elizabeth Smart, By Grand Central...
// Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress (later the post would be called Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress): Robert Penn Warren appointed this year. ...
// Ottawa native Elizabeth Smart moves permanently to England. ...
// T.S. Eliot - Little Gidding Frost Medal: Edgar Lee Masters Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: William Rose Benet, The Dust Which Is God October 23 - Douglas Dunn, poet date unknown - Gladys Cardiff, poet date unknown - Konstantin Balmont, poet Poetry List of poetry awards Categories: | | ...
// G. S. Fraser - The Fatal Landscape and Other Poems Frost Medal: Robert Frost Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Leonard Bacon: Sunderland Capture October 2 - John Sinclair, poet October 13 - John Snow, cricketer and poet Billy Collins January 6 - F. R. Higgins, poet January 23 - John Oxenham, novelist and poet February 7...
// Aldous Huxley is a screenwriter for the movie adaptation of Pride and Prejudice W.H. Auden, Another Time Sir John Betjeman, Old Lights for New Chancels T.S. Eliot, East Coker, published in New English Weekly Dylan Thomas, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog Pulitzer Prize for Poetry...
1930s // Last issue of The Criterion is published. ...
// Cleanth Brooks and Robert Penn Warren, editors, Understanding Poetry (appearing thereafter in revised editions to 1976) Louis MacNeice, The Earth Compels W.B. Yeats, New Poems, including Lapis Lazuli Hawthornden Prize - David Jones for In Parenthesis Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Marya Zaturenska: Cold Morning Sky February 22 â Ishmael Reed, American...
// ⢠Iowa Writers Workshop founded by Paul Engle at the University of Iowa Dr. Seuss publishes his first book, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street John Betjeman, Continual Dew, including The Arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel David Jones, In Parenthesis Isaac Rosenberg, Collected Works...
// James Laughlin founds New Directions Publishers in New York, which published many modern poets for the first time; New Directions publishes its first book and its first annual, New Directions in Prose and Poetry with contributions from Wallace Stevens, Ezra Pound, Elizabeth Bishop, Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams and others. ...
// T. S. Eliot, Murder in the Cathedral William Empson, Some Versions of Pastoral Louis MacNeice, Poems John Masefield, Box of Delights Wallace Stevens, Ideas of Order W. B. Yeats, A Full Moon in March Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Audrey Wurdemann: Bright Ambush January 30 â Richard Brautigan, writer and poet January...
// The Barretts of Wimpole Street, a film directed by Sidney Franklin, with Norma Shearer as Elizabeth Barrett and Fredric March as Robert Browning; redone in 1957, less successfully T. S. Eliot, The Rock George Oppen, Discrete Series Dylan Thomas, Eighteen Poems, including The Force that Through the Green Fuse Drives...
// Black Mountain College founded as a progressive, experimental educational institution which attracted poets who became known as the Black Mountain School of poetry. ...
// John Betjeman, Mount Zion Edmund Blunden publishes Wilfred Owens poems Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), Red Roses for Bronze Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Robert Frost: Collected Poems February 2 â Judith Viorst, American author known for her childrens books and poetry April 19 â Etheridge Knight, (died 1991), an African-American...
// Frost Medal inaugurated by the Poetry Society of America John Masefield becomes Poet Laureate T.S. Eliot - Ash Wednesday W. H. Auden, Poems, his first published book (accepted by T.S. Eliot on behalf of Faber & Faber, which remained Audens publisher for the rest of his life) Samuel Beckett...
1920s // Russian poets Daniil Kharms and Alexander Vvedensky found OBERIU (a Russian acronym for An Association of Real Art), an avant-garde grouping of Russian post-Futurist poets in the 1920s-1930s T.S. Eliot, For Lancelot Andrewes Robert Frost, West-Running Brook Federico GarcÃa Lorca, Romancero Gitano Thomas Hardy...
// T.S. Eliot enters the Church of England and assumes British citizenship G.K. Chesterton, Collected Poems Robert Desnos, La liberté ou lamour! T.S. Eliot, The Journey of the Magi Allama Iqbal, Zabur-i-Ajam (Persian Psalms) James Weldon Johnson, Gods Promises James Joyce, Pomes Penyeach J...
// The remains of English war poet Isaac Rosenberg are re-interred at Bailleul Road East Cemetery, Plot V, St. ...
// T.S. Eliot joins the publishing house of Faber & Gwyer, leaves Lloyds bank. ...
// October 10 â Ezra Pound leaves Paris permanently and moves to Rapallo, Italy. ...
// Djuna Barnes, A Book, collection of prose and poetry e. ...
// Pulitzer Prize for Poetry established The Criterion appears William Butler Yeats Who goes with Fergus (first published in 1892 is the song James Joyce has his character Stephen Daedalus sing to his mother as she lies dying in the novel Ulysses, published this year (the poem was Joyces favorite...
// Jorge Luis Borges, writer and poet, returns to Buenos Aires after a period living in Europe. ...
// The Dial, January 1920 issue Ezra Pound moves from London to Paris where he moved among a circle of artists, musicians and writers who were revolutionising modern art The Dial, a longstanding American literary magazine, is re-established by Scofield Thayer; the publication becomes an important outlet for Modernist poets...
1910s 19th century in poetry // The Egoist, goes defunct Two paintings by E. E. Cummings appear in a show of the New York Society of Independent Artists. ...
// Robert Graves marries Nancy Nicholson. ...
// The Egoist Wilfred Owen, a soldier in World War I, writes Dulce et Decorum Est (published posthumously in 1921). ...
// July 14 â At the first public soiree at the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich, Switzerland, Hugo Ball recited the first Dada manifesto (see text). ...
// The poem Into Battle is published in The Times a few weeks before its author, Julian Grenfell, is killed in battle. ...
// H. E. Monro edits The Poetry Review, journal of the Poetry Recital Society Harriet Munroe founds Poetry: A Magazine of Verse in Chicago (with Ezra Pound as foreign editor); in 1912 she described its policy this way: Ezra Pound, during a meeting with his one-time fiancee Hilda Doolittle in...
// Britain establishes six copyright libraries to which copies of all books published in the country must be sent: Bodleian Library (Oxford); British Library (London); National Library of Scotland (Edinburgh); National Library of Wales (Aberystwyth); Trinity College, Dublin; and Cambridge University Library. ...
// John Masefield, Ballads and Poems W.B. Yeats, Poems: Second Series November 14 â Norman MacCaig (died 1996) Scottish poet December 19 - Jean Genet, French novelist, playwright and poet December 27 â Charles Olson (died 1970), American poet October 17 - Julia Ward Howe, 91, American poet best known as the author of...
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1900s // Andrew Cecil Bradley, Oxford Lectures on Poetry Founding of the Poetry Recital Society (now the Poetry Society) T.E. Hulme leaves the Poets Club, and starts meeting with F.S. Flint and other poets in a new group which Hulme referred to as the Secession Club; they meet at the...
// W.B. Yeats in Dublin on 24 January, 1908 Ezra Pound leaves America for Europe. ...
1890s 1880s 1870s // Robert Browning, Pacchiarotto and How He Worked in Distemper William Morris, The Story of Sigurd the Volsung, and the Fall of the Niblungs Sarah Cleghorn (died 1959), American poet and socialist June 20 â John Neal, 82, author, art critic, literary critic, poet, who refused to emulate British authors by writing...
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13th century in poetry 12th century in poetry 11th century in poetry 10th century in poetry Nibelunglied written approximately 1180 - 1210. ...
1180 to 1210 - Nibelunglied The Tale of Igors Campaign in Old East Slavic, dated near the end of the century Categories: | | ...
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- 820 in poetry
810s - 819 in poetry
- 818 in poetry
- 817 in poetry
- 816 in poetry
- 815 in poetry
- 814 in poetry
- 813 in poetry
- 812 in poetry
- 811 in poetry
- 810 in poetry
800s - 809 in poetry
- 808 in poetry
- 807 in poetry
- 806 in poetry
- 805 in poetry
- 804 in poetry
- 803 in poetry
- 802 in poetry
- 801 in poetry
- 800 in poetry
8th century in poetry // Chinese poetry reaches a highpoint in the Tang dynasty with the work of Li Bai and Du Fu. ...
7th century in poetry // Caedmon likely flourishes from approximately 657 to 680 in Northumbria Abu Afak, from Hijaz, a Jewish poet writing in Arabic Al-Rabi ibn Abu al-Huqayq fl. ...
6th century in poetry // Alqama ibn Abada Amr ibn Kulthum ( - c. ...
5th century in poetry 4th century in poetry 3rd century in poetry 2nd century in poetry 1st century in poetry 1st century BC in poetry 2nd century BC in poetry 3rd century BC in poetry 4th century BC in poetry 5th century BC in poetry 6th century BC in poetry 7th century BC in poetry |