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Preface

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Summary

That as recently as the 1960s and early 1970s English poetry could have been reckoned a matter of life and death will strike most readers now as a concept hard to credit. One of the first to look back in bemusement was Sean O'Brien, who, in a collection of essays published in 1998, breaks off from a discussion of Ted Hughes to point out:

In the 1960s the savagery of the natural world as [Ted Hughes] conceived it was popularly twinned with [Thom] Gunn's more urbanised and erotic interest in aggression, and (for reasons no longer clear, supposing they ever were) a set of associations grew up around the two poets’ work: natureviolence-the-Holocaust-psychic crisis—a kind of cultural shorthand of which the present will have its own equivalents. Alvarez's essay ‘Beyond the Gentility Principle’, with which he introduced The New Poetry, as well as some of the essays in Beyond All This Fiddle and parts of the later study of suicide, The Savage God, are key documents in identifying the emotional style of the Fifties and Sixties—some features of which seem barely comprehensible at the moment.

Quick and accurate in his summary of the emotional style in question, O'Brien is too cautious—or too canny—to give it proper explanation or elaboration. That, however, is the task taken on by this book.

More generally, this is a study of the generation of poets born between 1929 and 1932 who succeeded and differed from the poets of the Movement. It concentrates on five poets: Thom Gunn (whose divided status as both a member of this group and of the Movement will be a subject of this study's early chapters), Geoffrey Hill, Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath and Peter Porter, and on one influential editor and critic, A. Alvarez.

As O'Brien attests, those wishing to wrestle with the emotional style that succeeded the Movement need to come to grips with the prose of A. Alvarez. Alvarez was one of the first to identify the promise of Gunn, Hill, Hughes, Plath and Porter, and, more than the academic critics who followed him, Alvarez it was who helped establish their reputations, Plath's and Hughes's in particular. Whether as commentator, populariser or provocateur, Alvarez not only helped create the taste by which these poets were enjoyed, his prose affected how they would regard their own and each other's work.

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The Alvarez Generation
Thom Gunn, Geoffrey Hill, Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and Peter Porter
, pp. xi - xvi
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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