Arthur Yvor Winters (October 17, 1900 – January 25, 1968) was an American poet and literary critic.
Life
Winters was born in Chicago, Illinois and lived there until 1919 except for brief stays in Seattle and Pasadena, where his grandparents lived. He attended the University of Chicago for four-quarters in 1917–18, where he was a member of a literary circle that included Glenway Wescott, Elizabeth Madox Roberts and his future wife Janet Lewis. In the winter of 1918–19 he was diagnosed with tuberculosis and underwent treatment for two years in Santa Fe, New Mexico. During his recuperation he wrote and published some of his early poems. On his release from the sanitarium he taught in high schools in nearby mining towns. In 1923 Winters published one of his first critical essays, "Notes on the Mechanics of the Poetic Image,"[1][page needed] in the expatriate literary journal Secession. That same year he enrolled at the University of Colorado, where he achieved his BA and MA degrees in 1925.
Winters's early poetry appeared in small avant-garde magazines alongside work by writers like James Joyce and Gertrude Stein and was written in the modernist idiom; it was heavily influenced both by Native American poetry and by Imagism, being described as 'arriving late at the Imagist feast'.[3][page needed] His essay "The Testament of a Stone" gives an account of his poetics during this early period. Although beginning his career as an admirer and imitator of the Imagist poets, Winters by the end of the 1920s had formulated a neo-classic poetics.[4][page needed] Around 1930, he turned away from modernism and developed an Augustan style of writing, notable for its clarity of statement and its formality of rhyme and rhythm, with most of his poetry thereafter being in the accentual-syllabic form.[3][page needed]
He attacked Romanticism, particularly in its American manifestations, and assailed Emerson's reputation as that of a sacred cow.[citation needed] His first book of poems, Diadems and Fagots, takes its title from one of Emerson's poems. In this he was probably influenced by Irving Babbitt.[citation needed] Winters was associated with the New Criticism.[6]
Winters is best known for his argument attacking the "fallacy of imitative form":
"To say that a poet is justified in employing a disintegrating form in order to express a feeling of disintegration, is merely a sophistical justification for bad poetry, akin to the Whitmanian notion that one must write loose and sprawling poetry to 'express' the loose and sprawling American continent. In fact, all feeling, if one gives oneself (that is, one's form) up to it, is a way of disintegration; poetic form is by definition a means to arrest the disintegration and order the feeling; and in so far as any poetry tends toward the formless, it fails to be expressive of anything."[5][page needed]
Bibliography
Diadems and Fagots (1921) poems
The Immobile Wind (1921) poems
The Magpie's Shadow (1922) poems
Notes on the Mechanics of the Image (1923) in Secession magazine
The Bare Hills (1927) poems
The Proof (1930) poems
The Journey and Other Poems (1931) poems
Before Disaster (1934) poems
Primitivism and Decadence: A Study of American Experimental Poetry Arrow Editions, New York, 1937
Maule's Curse: Seven Studies in the History of American Obscurantism (1938)
^ abSchmidt, Michael, Lives of Poets, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London 1999 ISBN978-0297840145
^Notes to the poems in The Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams, volume 1, 1909–1939, edited by A. Walton Litz and Christopher MacGowan Carconet Press, Manchester 2000 ISBN1857545222
^ abPrimitivism and Decadence: A Study of American Experimental Poetry Arrow Editions, New York, 1937
^Lurie, Peter (2004–2005). "Querying the Modernist Canon: Historical Consciousness and the Sexuality of Suffering in Faulkner and Hart Crane". The Faulkner Journal. 20 (1/2): 149–76.
Further reading
Richard J. Sexton (1973). The Complex of Yvor Winters' Criticism
Thomas Francis Parkinson (1978). Hart Crane and Yvor Winters
Grosvenor Powell (1980). Language as Being in the Poetry of Yvor Winters
Elizabeth Isaacs (1981). An Introduction to the Poetry of Yvor Winters
Dick Davis (1983). Wisdom and Wilderness: The Achievement of Yvor Winters