| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
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| Aiken, Conrad |
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( ´k n) (KEY) , 18891973, American author, b. Savannah, Ga., grad. Harvard, 1912. Aiken is best known for his poetry, which often is preoccupied with the sound and structure of music; his volumes of verse include The Charnel Rose (1918), Selected Poems (1929; Pulitzer Prize), Brownstone Eclogues (1942), Collected Poems (1953), A Letter from Li Po (1956), A Seizure of Limericks (1964), and The Clerks Journal (1971). In 1924 he edited Emily Dickinsons Selected Poems, which established her literary reputation. Aikens interest in psychopathology is evident in the novels Blue Voyage (1927) and Great Circle (1933). His collected critical essays, A Reviewers ABC, appeared in 1958, his collected short storiesincluding Mr. Arcularis and Silent Snow, Secret Snowin 1961. Aiken held (195057) the poetry chair at the Library of Congress and was awarded the National Medal for Literature (1969). | 1 | | See his autobiography, Ushant (1952, repr. 1971); biography by J. Martin (1962). | 2 |
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| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
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