Returning to Ezuversity: Feminism and Emancipation in the Letters of Ezra Pound to Forgotten Modernist Iris Barry,1916-1917
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Camacho Roldán, PaulaEditorial
Spanish Association of Anglo-American Studies
Materia
Barry, Iris, 1895-1969 Pound, Ezra, 1885-1972 Ezuversity
Date
2019-12Referencia bibliográfica
0210-6124
Abstract
At the beginning of the twentieth century, many young male and female poets attended “Ezuversity,” that is, Ezra Pound’s programme through which he educated them on the art of reading and writing. This study focuses on the case of Iris Barry (1895-1969), the English poet, novelist, film critic and forgotten modernist pioneer, to whom Pound sent a series of letters at the beginning of the twentieth century encouraging her to emancipate herself and avoid marriage. It also analyses “The Ezra Pound Period,” a text written by Barry and published in the Bookman in 1931, which serves as a response to the poet’s letters and instruction. The aim of this article is to contribute to feminist modernist studies by rescuing Barry from oblivion and by highlighting Pound’s promotion and support of many women writers who would later play a significant role in literary modernism.