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imagism

NOUN
  1. 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

How To Use imagism In A Sentence

  • It can be a particularly valuable introduction to Wordsworth, whose directness of statement is better judged by the standards of song lyrics than of imagism. Abstracts
  • Yet these pieces' mixture of lyricism, imagism, meditation and narrative are all hallmarks of the prose poem tradition.
  • He is the poet for people who feel the magic of music and the grandeur of imagination, without being able to lay their finger on the more recondite nuances of "creative work," without so much as ever having heard of "imagism. Suspended Judgments Essays on Books and Sensations
  • Synchronously departmentally, with his real estate richmond virginia for mesomorphic imagism barometer and alkylic mastigophore, is as fanned and tomentose tangerine in quickening, and in emydidae. Rational Review
  • Writers and poets also embraced Impressionism, and began to use imagism and symbolism to convey their impressions, rather than the objective characteristics of certain events and objects.
  • This second work dealt with many biblical themes and reflected the influence of Jewish culture, as well as imagism and Japanese haiku. Babette Deutsch.
  • Imagism, greatly influenced by ancient Chinese poetry, dramatically came back to China several times and exerted great influence upon both modern and contemporary Chinese poetry.
  • The first two stanzas of the above are very close to imagism.
  • Miss Lowell's "Patterns" is one of the most effective of contemporary poems, but it is far more than a document of imagism. A Study of Poetry
  • Modernist poetics, especially in its early formulation as imagism, also stresses the singularity of visual or tactile stimulus in conjunction with intuitive thought and spontaneous language.
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