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Cascadia Poetry Festival 8
Workshop The Cantos of Ezra Pound

Register for The Cantos Workshop NOW

October 16, 2023
Veronica Martinez

We are incredibly honored to have esteemed poet and translator Andrew Schelling teach a workshop this fall on Ezra Pound’s multi-decade, multi-language, multi-faceted poem The Cantos. Registration is OPEN for this wonderful opportunity explore this difficult yet legendary book.

From Hailey, Idaho, but later Europe where he would remain throughout his life, Ezra Pound was associated with multiple iconic writers of the time, such as T.S. Eliot, Ernest Hemingway, William Butler Yeats and William Carlos Williams. Pound began writing The Cantos in 1915, and in July of 1917 Canto III was published in Poetry magazine by editor Harriet Monroe.

In 1925, the multiple Cantos were compiled into A Draft of XVI Cantos. The Pisan Cantos were written while Pound was incarcerated in an American detention center in Italy and won the prestigious Bolligen Prize for Poetry in 1949. The Cantos became Pound’s major poetic work throughout his life, and the last sections were published in 1968 before his death in 1972. The current collection includes 120 sections. While much of Pound’s work has been met with unfavorable public opinions due to his rejection of poetic formalities and anti-semitism, many poets have turned to Pound’s work as a resistance to the stringent rules of New Criticism teachings.

Focusing on multiple themes with a nonlinear structure, The Cantos can be difficult to comprehend, with Pound himself stating “I cannot make it cohere.” Through reading and analysis regarding not only The Cantos, but the literary culture of the “Pound era,” ancestral teachings, and politics, economics, art, and human history, Andrew Schelling’s fall workshop offers insight and context to the book.

More information and registration for the workshop are available HERE. More information on Andrew Schelling is available HERE. The first class of this workshop will take place on November 19, so be sure to register ASAP! You won’t want to miss this insightful and in depth opportunity to learn about one of poetry’s many influential works.

Sources:
https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Cantos
https://poets.org/book/cantos
https://bollingen.yale.edu/poet/ezra-pound

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Paul: You know, you moved up here and one of the first things you did as a teacher in Prince George – was it UNBC at the time when you moved here – the University of Northern British Columbia?
Barry: No, it was the College of New Caledonia.
Paul: And you were teaching English in a welding class?
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BM: Yeah, 1969. But in that first year here we taught out of the high school. We’d start teaching at three in the afternoon after the high school was out, so we were a night school. We were kind of interlopers. The high school teachers thought, “oh, here are these smarty pants academics coming in and taking over the functions that we’ve provided!”