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imagism
(redirected from Imagists)

   Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.
im·a·gism also Im·a·gism  (m-jzm)
n.
A literary movement launched by British and American poets early in the 20th century that advocated the use of free verse, common speech patterns, and clear concrete images as a reaction to Victorian sentimentalism.

ima·gist n.
ima·gistic adj.
ima·gisti·cal·ly adv.

imagism [ˈɪmɪˌdʒɪzəm]
n
(Literary & Literary Critical Terms) a poetic movement in England and America between 1912 and 1917, initiated chiefly by Ezra Pound, the US poet, translator, and critic (1885-1972), advocating the use of ordinary speech and the precise presentation of images
imagist  n & adj
imagistic  adj
imagistically  adv

Imagism
a theory or practice of a group of English and American poets between 1909 and 1917, especially emphasis upon the use of common speech, new rhythms, unrestricted subject matter, and clear and precise images. — Imagist, n. — Imagistic, adj.
See also: Literature
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.imagism - a movement by American and English poets early in the 20th century in reaction to Victorian sentimentality; used common speech in free verse with clear concrete imagery
art movement, artistic movement - a group of artists who agree on general principles


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Ishmael Reed, firmly situated in the canon, has referred to the Norton as a "feminist propaganda volume" and criticized what he feels is the perfunctory treatment given to "the black writers of the 1960s," who he sees as "the most influential writers since the Imagists of the turn of the century" (Dick 230).
And when he analyzed the blues, Brown discerned a poetic approach that paralleled the Imagists and other Modernists "in substituting the thing seen for the bookish dressing up and sentimentalizing" that characterized nineteenth-century literary verse ("The Blues as Folk Poetry" 378).
Yet Wright's interest in and study of haiku came not from the American Imagists.
 
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