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         Rexroth Kenneth:     more books (100)
  1. An Autobiographical Novel (A Revived Modern Classic) by Kenneth Rexroth, 1991-11-01
  2. Love Poems from the Japanese (Shambhala Library) by Sam Hamill, 2003-01-28
  3. Women Poets of Japan
  4. The Complete Poems of Kenneth Rexroth by Kenneth Rexroth, 2004-09-01
  5. The Selected Poems of Kenneth Rexroth by Kenneth Rexroth, 1984-09
  6. Women Poets of China (New Directions Paperbook, 528)
  7. 100 Poems from the Japanese
  8. The Alternative Society by Kenneth Rexroth, 1972
  9. The Alternative Society: Essays From the Other World by Kenneth Rexroth, 1972
  10. American Poetry In the Twentieth Century by Kenneth Rexroth, 1973
  11. Li Ching-Chao: Complete Poems by Ching-Chao Li, 1980-02
  12. The Collected Shorter Poems of Kenneth Rexroth by Kenneth Rexroth, 1966-06
  13. Classics Revisited by Kenneth Rexroth, 1986-05-01
  14. Kenneth Rexroth (Boise State University western writers series) by Lee Bartlett, 1988-07

1. Kenneth Rexroth Archive
devoted to writings by and about the great poet, essayist, social critic and Renaissance man, Kenneth Rexroth (19051982).
http://www.bopsecrets.org/rexroth
B U R E A U O F P U B L I C S E C R E T S
Kenneth Rexroth Archive
Introduction
Texts at This Site

Texts at Other Websites

Rexroth Books in Print
...
Out-of-Print Rexroth Books
Introduction
This section of the BPS website is devoted to writings by and about the great poet, essayist, social critic and Renaissance man, Kenneth Rexroth (1905-1982). The emphasis will be on his out-of-print works (especially his numerous essays, articles and reviews), but it will also include selections from some of the in-print works. The primary aim is to introduce readers to a truly wonderful writer and encourage them to seek out whatever books of his are available. If enough interest is generated, perhaps publishers will bring more of his works back into print. or by permission of Copper Canyon Press (P.O. Box 271, Port Townsend, WA 98368) or by permission of Bradford Morrow, Literary Executor of the Kenneth Rexroth Trust (21 East 10th Street #3E, New York, NY 10003). They may not be reproduced for any commercial purpose, and even any extensive noncommercial reproduction should first be okayed with New Directions , Copper Canyon, or Mr. Morrow.

2. Rexroth Classics
The Classics According To Kenneth rexroth kenneth Rexroth (19051982) was a poet and essayist, an influence on the spread of Beat poetry (though not a Beat himself), and a student of languages.
http://members.aol.com/mikeb1/rexroth/classics.html
The Classics According To Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth (1905-1982) was a poet and essayist, an influence on the spread of Beat poetry (though not a Beat himself), and a student of languages. His translations of Chinese and Japanese poetry make many beautiful poems accessible to those of us who only know English. In a series of short essays, he reviewed the classics of world literature from his perspective, which valued art for its involvement with living human beings. In 1985 and 1989, New Directions published 101 of these essays in two paperback volumes, titled Classics Revisited (NDP621, ISBN 0-8112-0988-1) and More Classics Revisited (NDP668, ISBN 0-8112-1083-9). They can be hard to find. Amazon.com claims to have them. If all else fails, bug the publisher:
New Directions Publishing Corporation
80 Eighth Ave
New York, NY 10011 In my opinion, publishers of the works that Rexroth recommends should subsidize these two books, and give them away free. And put them on the Web. Some of Rexroth's recommendations include all or most of an author's works; read the essays for details. Some of these works are available in multiple editions or translations, not all of which Rexroth specified. Some are difficult to find. Many should be available in a public domain form, and would make good content for some ambitious hyper-etext project. Rexroth's essays are fascinating, and the reading list

3. 1996 Dharma Beat Player Plate- Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth. American Poet. An organizer of In Kerouac's Dharma Bums,Rexroth is Rheinhold Cacoethes. Kenneth Rexroth YEAR TEAM POS
http://www.cosmicbaseball.com/rexroth6.html
Kenneth Rexroth Outfield
Kenneth Rexroth
American Poet
An organizer of the infamous Six Gallery poetry reading of October 13, 1955. He has been described as "a middle-aged Chicago poet transplanted to San Francisco, where he held a salon for anarchists and maverick writers. Beloved as a 'hip square'. " Rexroth became involved with the Beat writers in the middle fifties. According to one of Kerouac's biographers, at a 1956 party, Kerouac made a drunken pass at one of Rexroth's daughter. This, needless to say soured their relationship. In 1959, Rexroth wrote an unfavorable review of Kerouac's Mexico City Blues. In Kerouac's Dharma Bums , Rexroth is Rheinhold Cacoethes. Kenneth Rexroth
YEAR TEAM POS B.AVG At Bats Hits HR RBI - - Rexroth, Kenneth 1983 Beats of .200 220 44 5 24 1987 Beats of .194 211 41 5 23 1995 Beats of .255 290 74 2 34 *Cosmic Seasons: 3 .216 721 159 12 81 Links will be set up shortly Links will be set up shortly
To the Top of this Plate
To the 1996 Dharma Beats Roster Plate
To Season 1996 Plate
To CBA's Home Plate Kenneth Rexroth- 1996 Dharma Beats
URL http://www.cosmicbaseball.com/rexroth6.html

4. WIEM Rexroth Kenneth
rexroth kenneth (19051982), amerykanski pisarz i malarz. Zwiazany RexrothKenneth (1905-1982), amerykanski pisarz i malarz. Zwiazany
http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/00c390.html

5. The Beat Page - Kenneth Rexroth
Short biography, evaluation and links to some poems.Category Arts Literature Authors R Rexroth, Kenneth......Kenneth Rexroth is perhaps one of the most accessible writers to havegained prominence during the Beat movement. He was born in
http://www.rooknet.com/beatpage/writers/rexroth.html

Runaway

Yin and Yang

Floating

Confusion
Other Writers: Richard Brautigan Charles Bukowski William S. Burroughs Neal Cassady Gregory Corso Robert Creeley Diane di Prima Robert Duncan William Everson Lawrence Ferlinghetti Allen Ginsberg John Clellon Holmes LeRoi Jones Bob Kaufman Jack Kerouac Ken Kesey Philip Lamantia Denise Levertov Michael McClure Frank O'Hara Peter Orlovsky Kenneth Patchen Gary Snyder Anne Waldman Lew Welch Philip Whalen William Carlos Williams PHOTO GALLERY Kenneth Rexroth is perhaps one of the most accessible writers to have gained prominence during the Beat movement. He was born in South Bend, Indiana in 1905 and died on June 6, 1982 in Montecito, California. In addition to being a writer, translator, essayist and philosopher, Rexroth also helped found the San Francisco Poetry Center. He received the California Literature Silver Medal Award in 1941 for his book, In What Hour Rexroth became a prolific painter and poet by the age of seventeen. He soon gained reputation as a radical by associating with various labor groups and political anarchists. When the second renaissance of the 1920's occurred in Chicago, Rexroth was there. He later became involved in the Beat movement, attempting to elevate common consciousness. He was later given the title, "Godfather of the Beats" because of his involvement with the readings and events at the Cellar jazz club. Rexroth's influence and talents were actually greater than the Beat movement itself. He was perceived by critics as more than just another West Coast anarchist poet. "He is a man of wide cultivation and, when not too busy shocking the bourgeois reader...a genuine poet", said a critic by the name of Rosenthal. A critic named Gibson observed of his book

6. L'Arengario. Beat Generation: Kenneth Rexroth
BEAT GENERATION. Kenneth Rexroth ( South Bend IN 1905 Montecito CA 1982). Opere di Kenneth Rexroth. rexroth kenneth, Beyond the Mountains.
http://www.arengario.it/mostre/beats/rexroth.htm
BEAT GENERATION Kenneth Rexroth
( South Bend IN 1905 - Montecito CA 1982 ) Bibliografia
In What Hour
Phoenix on the Tortoise
The Signature of All Things
The Art of Wordly Wisdom
Beyond the Mountains
The Dragon and the Unicorn
In Defence of the Heart
Poeta e pittore fra i primi a seguire le tendenze astrattiste. Appassionato difensore della Beat Generation , contribuì in modo determinante alla sua diffusione presso il grande pubblico. Opere di Kenneth Rexroth REXROTH Kenneth Beyond the Mountains . Four Plays in Verse , New York, New Direction Books, 1974; 20x13,2 cm., brossura, pp. 190 (2), copertina illustrata b.n. Esemplare con invio autografo dell'autore . Terza edizione.

7. Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth. Born December 22, 1905 Place of Birth Kenneth Rexrothwas not a Beat poet. He led his own earlier cultural movement
http://www.beatmuseum.org/rexroth/kennethrexroth.html
Kenneth Rexroth Born: December 22, 1905
Place of Birth: South Bend, Indiana
Died: June 6, 1982
Place of Death: Montecito, California Kenneth Rexroth was not a Beat poet. He led his own earlier cultural movement in San Francisco, inventing the idea of the Northern California city as a culturally 'happening' place. Before Allen Ginsberg arrived at Rexroth's doorstep in 1953 with a letter of introduction from William Carlos Williams, Rexroth had already gathered together several young poets who would soon participate in the Bay Area Beat scene, particularly Gary Snyder Michael McClure and Philip Whalen In this role as the master of the city's poets, he presided over the introduction of the Beat Generation to the world in the mid-to-late fifties, risking his name and reputation on the unconventional young upstarts, and organizing the Six Gallery poetry reading that caused a literary sensation in 1955. According to some biographical material, Rexroth later grew slightly irritated as the Beats began to reach immense fame, often offending his sensitive poetic ideals with their crazy hijinks. But this is typical old-guard vs. new-guard stuff. Rexroth was an important poet in his own scene, and deserves our eternal appreciation for having invented the idea of San Francisco as a center of literary innovation. Michael Blackstone has created a page about Rexroth.

8. Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth. You, The hyena Kenneth Rexroth was known as ReinholdCacoethes in Kerouac's Dharma Bums. Kenneth Rexroth Autobiography
http://www.jackmagazine.com/beatnews/rexroth.html
Kenneth Rexroth You,
The hyena with polished face and bow tie,
In the office of a billion dollar
Corporation devoted to service...
-from "Thou Shalt Not Kill" Born: December 22, 1905, South Bend, Indiana
Died: June 6, 1982, Montecito, California Of all the beats, Rexroth was one of the most politicala leftist who helped organize maritime unions in the 1920s. He also objected to World War II. It was poet William Everson who termed Kenneth: "Rexroth: Shaker and Maker." His poetry reflects his stances on capitalism, and caught the eye of other beats such as Ginsberg and Snyder. His poem "Thou Shalt Not Kill," a few lines of which are extracted above, was a tribute to Dylan Thomas. Besides politics, Rexroth was also into Asian literature and philosophy, which came through in his poetry. Kenneth Rexroth was known as Reinhold Cacoethes in Kerouac's Dharma Bums Kenneth Rexroth Autobiography Excerpts : Presented by The Bureau of Public Secrets, this site has excerpts of some of Rexroth's writings from An Autobiographical Novel . Also see some of Rexroth's translations Links Cosmic Baseball Association
Ho Chi Minh/Translations

LitKicks

S Press Beatland
... Back to Beat News

9. Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth (1905 1982). a web guide toKenneth Rexroth from literaryhistory.com.
http://www.literaryhistory.com/20thC/Rexroth.htm
Kenneth Rexroth (1905 - 1982) a web guide to Kenneth Rexroth from literaryhistory.com main page 20th century authors General Articles http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/rexroth/rexroth.htm An introduction to Kenneth Rexroth, plus excerpts of reputable critical discussions of some poems, from the Modern American Poetry Site (Univ. of Illinois). http://www.rooknet.com/beatpage/writers/rexroth.html An introduction to Rexroth from the Beat Page. http://www.charm.net/~brooklyn/People/KennethRexroth.html Another intro to Rexroth, from the Literary Kicks web site. http://www.slip.net/~knabb/PS/Rexroth.htm Reprinted in its entirety, The Relevance of Rexroth , 1990, by Kenneth Knabb. http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap10/rexroth.html A list of primary and secondary reading for Rexroth, from Professor Paul Reuben's PAL web site. http://www.jackmagazine.com/beatnews The Beat News web site from Jacket Magazine contains articles about historical Beat figures and current Beat news. http://www.harbour.sfu.ca/~hayward/UnspeakableVisions/TableOfContents.html An M.A. thesis on the publishing history of Beat writers, by Michael Hayward (1991). main page 20th century outline authors, alphabetical

10. Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth ?. The Orchid Boat. Kenneth Rexrothwas a poet and a cofounder of the San Francisco Poetry Center.
http://www.lib.ntu.edu.tw/dbs/dbs/translate/A_Rexroth.htm
Kenneth Rexroth
®i¥XĶ§@¡G The Orchid Boat ¤ý¬õ¤½¬O¸Ö¤H¡A¤]¬Oª÷¤s¸Ö¾Ç¤¤¤ßªº³Ð¥ßªÌ¤§¤@¡C ¦~¥Nªº©ÜÀY¥@¥Nºò±K¬Ûö¡C ¦~¾á¥ô¡u The Nation ¡vªº°OªÌ¡A ¦~¦P®É¬°¡u The San Francisco Examiner The Orchid Boat: Women Poets of China ¡v¡C¤ý¬õ¤½³u©ó ¦~¡C Kenneth Rexroth was a poet and a co-founder of the San Francisco Poetry Center. Born in 1905 in South Bend, Indiana, he was educated mainly by his parents. As a young man he was a wanderer who sometimes worked as a casual labourer. Later on he became a political radical, and associated with various leftist and avant-garde movements. His work was closely associated with the Beat generation of the 1950s. He was San Francisco correspondent of The Nation from 1953 to 1968, and a columnist of San Francisco Examiner from 1960 to 1968. Apart from writing poetry, Kenneth Rexroth was also known as a painter. As a literary translator he rendered into English poetry written in French, Spanish, and Greek. He is well known for his translations of classical and modern Chinese and Japanese poetry. He co-translated with Chung Ling works of Chinese women poets, which are published in Orchid Boat: Woman Poets of China. He died in 1982. It is a well known fact that the Anglo-American new poetics of the first half of the 20 th century drew upon translations from Asia as an important source of inspiration. Rexroth¡¦s interest in Chinese and Japanese poetry is therefore very much part of the modern American poetic tradition.

11. Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth (1905). Texts. A little child Chatman (tr); A littlechild picked with his fingers Chatman (A little child) (tr);
http://www.recmusic.org/lieder/r/rexroth/
Kenneth Rexroth (1905-)
Texts
  • A little child: Chatman (tr)
  • A little child picked with his fingers : Chatman ( A little child ) (tr)
  • A white bird: Chatman (tr)
  • Fair autumn: Chatman (tr)
  • I do not know why: Chatman (tr)
  • I do not know why but it is as though there were a cliff inside my head : Chatman ( I do not know why ) (tr)
  • I sought to make fair autumn yet more fair : Chatman ( Fair autumn ) (tr)
  • Left on the beach: Chatman (tr)
  • Left on the beach full of water : Chatman ( Left on the beach ) (tr)
  • Once, far over the breakers : Chatman ( A white bird ) (tr)
  • Swifter than hail: Chatman (tr)
  • Swifter than hail, lighter than a feather : Chatman ( Swifter than hail ) (tr)
  • The nightingale: Chatman The nightingale has not come to sing on this misty day ) (tr)
  • The nightingale has not come to sing on this misty day : Chatman ( The nightingale ) (tr)
Back to the Lied and Song Texts Page

12. Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth, Proust's Madeleine. home Last updated 2001.11.7.
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~richie/poetry/html/auth102.html
Kenneth Rexroth
Proust's Madeleine

[home]

Last updated: 2001.11.7.

13. Arts/Literature/Authors/R/Rexroth,_Kenneth
Arts / Literature / Authors / R / Rexroth, Kenneth. Kenneth rexroth kennethRexroth's role in American poetry (hyperlinks to other poets).
http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/R/Rexroth,_
Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Literature Authors R Rexroth, Kenneth Specific Texts Online
Kenneth Rexroth

Kenneth Rexroth's role in American poetry (hyperlinks to other poets).
URL: http://www.charm.net/~brooklyn/People/KennethRexroth.html
The Beat Page - Kenneth Rexroth

Short biography evaluation and links to some poems.

14. Kenneth Rexroth
rexroth kenneth. Hinckle,W. If You Have a Lemon, Make Lemonade. 1990(142); Turner,W. Rearview Mirror. 2001 (13). pages cited this
http://www.namebase.org/xrec/Kenneth_Rexroth.html
REXROTH KENNETH
pages cited this search: 2
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15. LitKicks: Kenneth Rexroth
kenneth rexroth's role in American poetry (hyperlinks to other poets).Category Arts Literature Authors R rexroth, kenneth...... kenneth rexroth. kenneth rexroth was born on December 22, 1905 in South Bend,Indiana. kenneth rexroth died on June 6, 1982 in Montecito, California.
http://www.charm.net/~brooklyn/People/KennethRexroth.html
Literary Kicks
Visit the general discussion board or view list of boards
Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth was born on December 22, 1905 in South Bend, Indiana. He was integral to the emergence of the Beat poets, but did not consider himself a member of this younger group himself. Rexroth had already led his own earlier cultural movement, a much publicized "poetry renaissance" in San Francisco , which helped to promote the idea of the Northern California city as a culturally 'happening' place. By the time Allen Ginsberg arrived at Rexroth's doorstep in 1953 with a letter of introduction from William Carlos Williams , the San Francisco Poetry Renaissance was already an established idea. Among the diverse poets who gravitated to this scene were several younger and fresher upstarts, like Gary Snyder Michael McClure and Philip Whalen . In October 1955 Rexroth lent his name and reputation to a loose poetry reading featuring this younger crowd. The reading at the Six Gallery caused a literary sensation and introduced the idea of the Beat Generation to the world. According to some biographical material, Rexroth later grew slightly irritated as the Beats began to reach immense fame, often offending his sensitive poetic ideals with their crazy hijinks. But this is typical old-guard vs. new-guard stuff. Rexroth was an important poet in his own scene, and deserves our eternal appreciation for having invented the idea of San Francisco as a center of literary innovation.

16. Kenneth Rexroth
Find articles, works, and essays on the poet. Includes a brief biography.
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/rexroth/rexroth.htm
Kenneth Rexroth (1905-1982) Kenneth Rexroth's Life On "The Love Poems of Marichiko" "Re-Discovering Community: Rexroth and the Whitman Tradition"An Essay by Linda Hamalian An Essay on Rexroth's Poetry by Donald K. Gutierrez ... External Links Prepared and Compiled by Linda Hamalian and Donald K. Gutierrez Return to Modern American Poetry Home Return to Poets Index

17. Public Secrets
Berkeley in the sixties. kenneth rexroth. How I became an anarchist. Part 2 (19691977)How I became a situationist. 1044. Contradiction. A fresh start.
http://www.bopsecrets.org/PS/
B U R E A U O F P U B L I C S E C R E T S
Public Secrets
Collected Skirmishes of Ken Knabb 1997. 408 pages
How To Order
THE JOY OF REVOLUTION
1. Some Facts of Life 2. Foreplay
Personal breakthroughs. Critical interventions. Theory versus ideology. Avoiding false choices and elucidating real ones. The insurrectionary style. Radical film. Oppressionism versus playfulness. The Strasbourg scandal. The poverty of electoral politics. Reforms and alternative institutions. Political correctness, or equal opportunity alienation. Drawbacks of moralism and simplistic extremism. Advantages of boldness. Advantages and limits of nonviolence.
3. Climaxes
4. Rebirth
Utopians fail to envision postrevolutionary diversity. Decentralization and coordination. Safeguards against abuses. Consensus, majority rule and unavoidable hierarchies. Eliminating the roots of war and crime. Abolishing money. Absurdity of most present-day labor. Transforming work into play. Technophobic objections. Ecological issues. The blossoming of free communities. More interesting problems.
CONFESSIONS OF A MILD-MANNERED
ENEMY OF THE STATE
Part 1 (1945-1969)
Childhood. How I became an atheist. Shimer College and first independent ventures. Berkeley in the sixties. Kenneth Rexroth. How I became an anarchist.

18. Kenneth Rexroth's Life
kenneth rexroth's Life. Caren Irr. rexroth, kenneth (22 Dec. 19056 June 1982), poet and translator, was born kenneth Charles
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/rexroth/rexroth_life.htm
Kenneth Rexroth's Life Caren Irr Rexroth, Kenneth (22 Dec. 1905- 6 June 1982), poet and translator, was born Kenneth Charles Marion Rexroth in South Bend, Indiana, the son of Charles Rexroth, a pharmaceuticals salesman, and Delia Reed. Owing to Charles's rocky career, the family moved frequently throughout the northern midwest until Delia died in 1916 and Charles in 1919. For the next three years, Rexroth lived with an aunt in Chicago. After his expulsion from high school, he educated himself in literary salons, nightclubs, lecture halls, and hobo camps while working as a wrestler, soda jerk, clerk, and reporter. In 1923-1924 he served a prison term for partial ownership of a brothel. During the 1920s, Rexroth backpacked across the country several times, visited Paris and New York, taught in a religious school, and spent two months in a Hudson Valley monastery. Reflections on these experiences appear in his later poetry, but his early work was cubist and surrealistoften opaquely so. In 1927 he married Andrée Schafer, an epileptic painter, and they moved to San Francisco. In the late 1920s Rexroth's first poems appeared in Pagany Morada , and Charles Henri Ford's Blues . He read much of Alfred North Whitehead's philosophy around this time. During the 1930s, Rexroth studied mysticism and Communism. Readings of Jacob Boehme, St. Thomas Aquinas, and John Duns Scotus influenced revisions to his long poem

19. Rexroth Classics
The Classics According To kenneth rexroth. kenneth rexroth (19051982)was a poet and essayist, an influence on the spread of Beat
http://users.aol.com/mikeb1/rexroth/classics.html
The Classics According To Kenneth Rexroth
Kenneth Rexroth (1905-1982) was a poet and essayist, an influence on the spread of Beat poetry (though not a Beat himself), and a student of languages. His translations of Chinese and Japanese poetry make many beautiful poems accessible to those of us who only know English. In a series of short essays, he reviewed the classics of world literature from his perspective, which valued art for its involvement with living human beings. In 1985 and 1989, New Directions published 101 of these essays in two paperback volumes, titled Classics Revisited (NDP621, ISBN 0-8112-0988-1) and More Classics Revisited (NDP668, ISBN 0-8112-1083-9). They can be hard to find. Amazon.com claims to have them. If all else fails, bug the publisher:
New Directions Publishing Corporation
80 Eighth Ave
New York, NY 10011 In my opinion, publishers of the works that Rexroth recommends should subsidize these two books, and give them away free. And put them on the Web. Some of Rexroth's recommendations include all or most of an author's works; read the essays for details. Some of these works are available in multiple editions or translations, not all of which Rexroth specified. Some are difficult to find. Many should be available in a public domain form, and would make good content for some ambitious hyper-etext project. Rexroth's essays are fascinating, and the reading list

20. Art Song Catalog: Biographies: Page 18 Of 25
99. click for top of page. rexroth, kenneth. American poet (see songs)12/22/1905 6/6/1982, working primarily in English. This entry
http://www.daringdiva.com/cat/PnBi18.html
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Queneau, Raymond
French poet ( see songs ) 1903 - 1976, working primarily in French This entry contributed by around 11/22/98 Other Web Site: http://search.biography.com/print_record.pl?id=3121 This entry contributed by around 1/25/99 click for top of page
Ranasinghe, Anne
Sri Lankan German ) poet ( see songs This entry contributed by around 10/5/99 From the foreward of the song cycle Daughters , composed by Lori Laitman: Anne Ranasinghe was born in Anneliese Katz in Essen in 1925. She was an only child; and witnessed 'Kristallnacht' ('the Night of Broken Glass'); the burning of the synagogue in Essen; her father's arrest and transportation to Dachau; and his subsequent return as a physical and mental wreck. In 1939, when Anne was 13, her parents sent her to England to escape the Nazis. She was met by an aunt she had never seen before, and within a week, was sent to a school 140 miles away to live among strangers and to learn a new language. Within six months, World War II broke out, and she became an enemy alien. Much later, Anne would learn that her parents and all of her relatives had been murdered by the Nazis.

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