David Bromige

http://dbpedia.org/resource/David_Bromige an entity of type: Thing

David Mansfield Bromige (October 22, 1933 – June 3, 2009) was a Canadian-American poet who resided in northern California from 1962 onward. Bromige published thirty books, many so different from one another as to appear to be the work of a different author. Associated in his youth with the New American Poetry and especially with Robert Duncan and Robert Creeley, Bromige is sometimes associated with the language poets, but this connection is based more on his close friendships with some of those poets, and their admiration for his work. It is difficult to fit Bromige into a slot. He departs from language poetry in the thematic unity of many of his poems, in the uses to which he puts found materials, with the romantic aspect of his lyricism, and with the sheer variety of his approaches to th rdf:langString
rdf:langString David Bromige
rdf:langString David Bromige
rdf:langString David Bromige
rdf:langString Sebastopol, California
xsd:date 2009-06-03
rdf:langString London, England
xsd:date 1933-10-22
xsd:integer 251786
xsd:integer 1073122253
xsd:date 1933-10-22
rdf:langString David Bromige, c. 1986; photograph by Christopher Bromige
xsd:date 2009-06-03
xsd:integer 180
rdf:langString Poet, professor
rdf:langString David Mansfield Bromige (October 22, 1933 – June 3, 2009) was a Canadian-American poet who resided in northern California from 1962 onward. Bromige published thirty books, many so different from one another as to appear to be the work of a different author. Associated in his youth with the New American Poetry and especially with Robert Duncan and Robert Creeley, Bromige is sometimes associated with the language poets, but this connection is based more on his close friendships with some of those poets, and their admiration for his work. It is difficult to fit Bromige into a slot. He departs from language poetry in the thematic unity of many of his poems, in the uses to which he puts found materials, with the romantic aspect of his lyricism, and with the sheer variety of his approaches to the poem.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12679
xsd:gYear 1933
xsd:gYear 2009

data from the linked data cloud