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         Howe Susan:     more books (100)
  1. Singularities (Wesleyan Poetry Series) by Susan Howe, 1990-10-15
  2. My Emily Dickinson (New Directions Paperbook) by Susan Howe, 2007-11-15
  3. The Europe of Trusts by Susan Howe, 2002-04
  4. The Nonconformist's Memorial: Poems (New Directions Paperbook, 755) by Susan Howe, 1993-06-17
  5. The Birth-mark: unsettling the wilderness in American literary history by Susan Howe, 1993-04-15
  6. Led by Language: The Poetry and Poetics of Susan Howe (Modern & Contemporary Poetics) by Rachel Back, 2002-02-12
  7. Pierce-Arrow by Susan Howe, 1999-06-17
  8. The Midnight by Susan Howe, 2003-05
  9. The Poetry of Susan Howe: History, Theology, Authority (Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics) by William Montgomery, 2010-09-15
  10. The Small Space of a Pause: Susan Howe's Poetry and the Space Between by Elisabeth W. Joyce, 2010-05-31
  11. Souls of the Labadie Tract (New Directions Paperbook) by Susan Howe, 2007-11-17
  12. Frame Structures: Early Poems 1974-1979 (New Directions Paperback, 822) by Susan Howe, 1996-06-17
  13. Through Words of Others: Susan Howe and Anarcho-Scholasticism (E L S Monograph Series) by Stephen Collis, 2007-09-04
  14. Stone Spirits (Redd Center Publications) by Susan Elizabeth Howe, 1997-08

1. Small Press Traffic > Susan Howe
Brief profile of the author.Category Arts Literature Authors H Howe, Susan......Susan Howe The last time Susan Howe read for Small Press Traffic was three yearsago, and mobs of people jammed the tiny space of Canessa Parkthrilled
http://www.sptraffic.org/html/authors/howes.html
events new writing book reviews author biographies ... links Susan Howe
The last time Susan Howe read for Small Press Traffic was three years ago, and mobs of people jammed the tiny space of Canessa
Parkthrilled, delighted, awed. Simply put, Howe is one of the greatest readers we've ever heard, AND WE'VE HEARD THEM ALLas well as a great poet, thinker and archaeologist of "marginalia."
Howe is a Professor of English at the State University of New York, Buffalo. She is the author of My Emily Dickinson, The Europe of Trusts, Singularities, The Birth-Mark: Unsettling the Wilderness in American Literary History, and The Nonconformist's Memorial
Her latest book is Frame Structures: Early Poems 1974-1979 (Sun & Moon). Geoffrey O'Brien has written, that Howe's work is "a voyage of reconnaissance in language, a sounding out of ancient hiding places, and it is a voyage full of risk. 'Words are the only clues we have,' she has said. 'What if they fail us?'"
February 8, 1997

2. Susan Howe
Susan Howe (1937 ) About Susan Howe's Poetry Fragments Toward Autobiography On Susan Howe and History On "Hope Atherton's Wanderings" Sample Pages from Eikon Basilike and Thorow Susan Howe Book Covers Bibliography External Links
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/howe/howe.htm
Susan Howe (1937- ) About Susan Howe's Poetry Fragments Toward Autobiography On Susan Howe and History On "Hope Atherton's Wanderings" ... External Links Prepared and Compiled by Cary Nelson Return to Modern American Poetry Home Return to Poets Index

3. Susan Howe - The Academy Of American Poets
Susan Howe The Academy of American Poets presents biographies, photographs, selectedpoems, and links as part of its online poetry exhibits. Susan Howe.
http://www.poets.org/awards/showe
poetry awards poetry month poetry exhibits about the academy Search Larger Type Find a Poet Find a Poem Listening Booth ... Add to a Notebook Susan Howe Susan Howe was born in 1937 in Boston, Massachusetts. She is the author of several books of poems and two volumes of criticism. Her most recent poetry collections are The Europe of Trusts (New Directions, 2002), Pierce-Arrow Frame Structures: Early Poems 1974-1979 The Nonconformist's Memorial The Europe of Trusts: Selected Poems (1990), and Singularities (1990). Her books of criticism are The Birth-Mark: Unsettling the Wilderness in American Literary History (1993), which was named an "International Book of the Year" by the Times Literary Supplement , and My Emily Dickinson (1985). Her work also has appeared in Anthology of American Poetry , edited by Cary Nelson (Oxford University Press, 1999); Moving Borders: Three Decades of Innovative Writing by Women , edited by Mary Margaret Sloan (1998); and Poems for the Millennium , Volume 2, edited by Pierre Joris and Jerome Rotherberg (1998). She has received two American Book Awards from the Before Columbus Foundation and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1999. In 1996 she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and in the winter of 1998 she was a distinguished fellow at the Stanford Institute of the Humanities. Since 1989 she has been a professor of English at the State University of New York at Buffalo, and was elected a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets in 2000. Susan Howe lives in Guilford, Connecticut.

4. Bed Hangings -- Susan Howe Susan Bee
by Susan Howe,. Illustrated by Susan Bee. ISBN 1887123474. In Bed Hangings ,poet Susan Howe and artist Susan Bee collaborate for the first time.
http://www.semcoop.com/detail/1887123474
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5. Susan Howe
Susan Howe (1937 ). a web guide to Susan Howe from literaryhistory.com.
http://www.literaryhistory.com/20thC/Howe.htm
Susan Howe (1937 - ) a web guide to Susan Howe from literaryhistory.com main page 20th century outline authors, alphabetical 19th century authors General Articles http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/howe/howe.htm An introduction, plus excerpts of reputable critical discussions of some poems, from the Modern American Poetry Site (Univ. of Illinois). http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=195 An introduction to the poet from the Academy of American Poets. http://english.rutgers.edu/brian.htm An article discusses Susan Howe's writings as a series of counter-measures against the male literary canon. Presented at the conference Poetry and the Public Sphere, April 1997. http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/authors/perloff/langpo.html "Language Poetry And The Lyric Subject: Ron Silliman's Albany, Susan Howe's Buffalo," by Marjorie Perloff. http://www.english.upenn.edu/~afilreis/88/howe-review.html "Exaggerated History," a review, by Susan Schultz, of Susan Howe's The Birth-Mark: Unsettling the Wilderness in American Literary History and The Nonconformist's Memorial . Originally published in Postmodern Culture 4,2 (January, 1994).

6. Harriet Townsend On Susan B. Anthony
Reminiscences of Famous Women Introduction Julia Ward howe susanB. Anthony Frances E. Willard Maria Mitchell Abby Morton Diaz.
http://womenshistory.about.com/library/etext/bl_townsend_anthony.htm
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Susan B. Anthony From Reminiscences of Famous Women by Harriet A. Townsend. This edition originally published in 1916. Introduction
Julia Ward Howe
Susan B. Anthony Frances E. Willard ... Abby Morton Diaz The etext has been reformatted, redesigned and hyperlinked to add to its usefulness as a research document. Susan B. Anthony, the greatest apostle of Woman's rights, was a remarkable character. I remember when a young school-girl that my father, who was a busy lawyer, said to my mother: "There is to be a meeting today in behalf of woman's suffrage, and I want our girls to go." My mother, an old-fashioned home woman of Quaker descent, was greatly surprised. "You would not have them wish to vote," she said.

7. Susan Elizabeth Howe
Susan Elizabeth Howe. Susan Elizabeth Howe lives with her husband inEphraim, Utah and teaches at Brigham Young University. Her poems
http://humanities.byu.edu/MLDB/Who/b-howes.htm
Mormon Literature Who's Who
Susan Elizabeth Howe
Susan Elizabeth Howe lives with her husband in Ephraim, Utah and teaches at Brigham Young University. Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker Southwest Review Prairie Schooner Shenandoah , and other journals. She has also published stories and plays, and she has been editor of Exponent II and The Denver Quarterly and poetry editor for Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought . Her collection, Stone Spirits (1997), received the Association for Mormon Letters Award in poetry.

8. Susan (Gemmel) Howe
Susan (Gemmel) Howe. Hometown Dracut, MA. Birthday 2/24/72. MemberSpring 1991 Spring 1992. Graduate of 1994. Voice Part Everything
http://www.clarku.edu/students/clarkbars/members/alumni/susan_gemmel_howe.htm
Susan (Gemmel) Howe Hometown: Dracut, MA Birthday: Member: Spring 1991 - Spring 1992 Graduate of: Voice Part: Everything from high Soprano to Tenor (but officially a Soprano back then – now I’m an Alto) Major: Studio Art Minor: Music Solos: Kiss the Girl, Is She Really Going Out With Him, Our House...and...I think that's it. Current Profession: Am I using my Studio Art B.A. and Music Minor? Uh...no. Product Data Coordinator for Philips Medical Systems. Memory: One of my favorite Clark Bars memories: I'll never forget the first time we sang "Lion Sleeps Tonight" and "Day-O" simultaneously. We were at rehearsal, arguing about which one to sing (or sing first, I don't recall). We decided to try singing them together just for the hell of it. And it was magic, baby, pure magic... E-mail: suze1@attbi.com

9. Contents.591 May, 1991
Mike Reynolds Joe Gomez Avital Ronell Robert Hodge Andrew Ross bell hooks JorgeRuffinelli Susan howe susan M. Schultz E. Ann Kaplan William Spanos Arthur
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/pmc/text-only/issue.591/contents.591.html
MATIBAG 591 The Dialectics of Cannibalism in Modern Caribbean Narratives" Allison Fraiberg, "Of AIDS, Cyborgs, and Other FRAIBERG 591 Indiscretions: Resurfacing the Body in the Postmodern" David Porush's response to Allison Fraiberg's COMMENT 591 "Of AIDS, Cyborgs, and Other Indiscretions" and Fraiberg's reply to Porush Steven B. Katz, Three Poems KATZ 591 Stuart Moulthrop, "You Say You Want MOULTHRO 591 A Revolution: Hypertext and the Laws of Media" John R. Maier, "Two Moroccan Storytellers MAIER 591 MIKICS-1 591 and Underground Revisionism in Ishmael MIKICS-2 591 Reed" Elizabeth A. Wheeler, "Bulldozing the Subject" WHEELER 591 POPULAR CULTURE COLUMN: Marcia Ian, "From Abject to Object" POP-CULT 591 REVIEW-1 591 REVIEW-2 591 REVIEW-3 591 ... REVIEW-4 591 Speech, Writing, and Representation in North American Indian Texts_, ed. David Murray. The Editors, "Postface" POSTFACE 591 Announcements and Advertisements [WWW Version only] - ABSTRACTS Eugenio D. Matibag, "Self-Consuming Fictions: The Dialectics of Cannibalism in Modern Caribbean Narratives"

10. Susan Howe
susan howe. bio/bibliography. about this recording. listen to this recording.
http://www.yale.edu/theamericas/howe.html
susan howe bio/bibliography about this recording listen to this recording

11. Susan Howe
Susan Howe. PierceArrow. Susan Howe Susan Bee Bed Hangings. Where NothingIs Long Ago Memories of a Mormon Childhood (Signature Mormon Classics).
http://www.artistactoractress.com/author/h/howe_susan.html
Susan Howe
Pierce-Arrow My Emily Dickinson Led by Language : The Poetry and Poetics of Susan Howe (Modern and Contemporary Poetics) The Nonconformist's Memorial : Poems (New Directions Paperbook, 755) The Birth-Mark : Unsettling the Wilderness in American Literary History Where Nothing Is Long Ago : Memories of a Mormon Childhood (Signature Mormon Classics) Stone Spirits (Redd Center Publications) Secret history of the dividing line Pythagorean silence Singularities (Wesleyan Poetry) Authors: H ArtistActorActress.com

12. Susan Howe Papers
susan howe Papers 1942 1990 Mandeville Special Collections Library University of California, San Diego Papers of susan howe, American poet. Papers of susan howe, American poet. The papers primarily document howe's literary correspondence, poetry manuscripts,
http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/testing/html/mss0201a.html
Register of
Susan Howe Papers
MSS 0201 Mandeville Special Collections Library Geisel Library University of California, San Diego Papers of Susan Howe, American poet. The papers primarily document Howe's literary correspondence, poetry manuscripts, manuscripts of readings and talks, personal and working journals and art/poetry installations dating from the early 1970s to the mid-1980s. A small group of personal and family materials is also included. Prominent correspondents include George Butterick, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Lyn Hejinian, and John Taggart. The bulk of the collection consists of Howe's working manuscripts and journals. Also part of the collection are over one hundred recordings from Howe's late 1970s radio program, "Poetry," at WBAI Radio Station, N.Y. The collection is arranged in five series: 1) CORRESPONDENCE, 2) WRITINGS, 3) PHOTOGRAPHS AND EPHEMERA, 4) TAPE RECORDINGS, and 5) ORIGINALS OF PRESERVATION PHOTOCOPIES. Extent: 5.90 linear feet (13 archives boxes, 3 card file boxes, 1 oversize folder)
RESTRICTIONS
The diaries dated 1981 are restricted; researchers may gain access to these items only with the expressed written permission of Susan Howe. The letters written by Mary Manning Howe are restricted; researchers may gain access to these items only with the express written permission of Susan Howe and Fanny Howe.

13. EPC/Susan Howe Home Page
Includes the author's works in RealAudio format for downloading and the author's syllabi.Category Arts Literature Authors H howe, susan......susan howe LINEbreak audio program Course Syllabi Note susan howe's PierceArrownow available from New Directions. Online Works
http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/authors/howe/
Susan Howe LINEbreak Course Syllabi
Note: Susan Howe's Pierce-Arrow now available from New Directions. Online Works:

14. Susan Howe On LINEbreak
Poetry program with susan howe.Category Arts Literature Authors H howe, susan......susan howe. EPC howe Home Page susan howe's first halfhour programin RealAudio format (from Wings server), or click here to download
http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/linebreak/programs/howe/
Susan Howe
EPC Howe Home Page Click here to order a tape of this or any other LINEbreak program. Click here for tips on playing RealAudio files and on getting the best sound In her programs Susan Howe discusses the trajectory of her literary career, from her roots in painting to the establishing of the Poetics Program at the State University of New York at Buffalo. She also speaks about the poetry of war in relation to women writers and about the misrepresentations of Emily Dickinson in the study of American Literature. Susan's programs were recorded on a hot summer day in a New York City appartment in 1995.

15. Susan Howe's "My Emily Dickinson" (excerpt)

http://www.english.upenn.edu/~afilreis/88/my-emily.html
Susan Howe, My Emily Dickinson
(excerpts)
Emily Dickinson once wrote to Thomas Wentworth Higginson; "Candormy Preceptoris the only wile." This is the right way to put it. In his Introduction to In the American Grain [1925], William Carlos Williams said he had tried to rename things seen. I regret the false configurationunder the old misappellationof Emily Dickinson. But I love his book. The ambiguous paths of kinship pull me in opposite ways at once. As a poet I feel closer to Williams' writing about writing, even when he goes haywire in "Jacataqua," than I do to most critical studies of Dickinson's work by professional scholars. When Williams writes: "Never a woman, never a poet.... Never a poet saw sun here," I think that he says one thing and means another. A poet is never just a woman or a man. Every poet is salted with fire. A poet is a mirror, a transcriber. Here "we have salt in ourselves and peace one with the other." When Thoreau wrote his Introduction to A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers , he ended by remembering how he had often stood on the banks of the Musketaquid, or Grass-ground River English settlers had re-named Concord. The Concord's current followed the same law in a system of time and all that is known. He liked to watch this current that was for him an emblem of all progress. Weeds under the surface bent gently downstream shaken by watery wind. Chips, sticks, logs, and even tree stems drifted past. There came a day at the end of the summer or the beginning of autumn, when he resolved to launch a boat from shore and let the river carry him.

16. Susan Schultz On Susan Howe In PMC
1 The recent publication of two books by susan howe marks a further climb in the upward curve of her reputation as one
http://www.english.upenn.edu/~afilreis/88/howe-review.html
EXAGGERATED HISTORY by
Review of: Somewhere Thoreau says that exaggerated history is poetry. Susan Howe, "The Captivity And Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson" (Birth-mark 96) My Emily Dickinson , "Identity and memory are crucial for anyone writing poetry. For women the field is still dauntingly empty. How do I, choosing messages from the code of others in order to participate in the universal theme of Language, pull SHE from all the myriad symbols and sightings of HE" (17-18). [For excerpts from My Emily Dickinson , click here It is the Word to whom she turns True submission and subjection As if all history were a progress She was coming to anoint him [this is written upside-down] A single thread of narrative headstrong anarchy thoughts [again upside-down] Actual world nothing ideal In Peter she is nameless [upside-down] The nets were not torn The Gospel did not grasp (7) WORKS CITED

17. Howe, Susan
Wilton, Norfolk, England Marriage 25 Dec 1827 susan howe Icklingham All Saints, Icklingham, Suffolk, England Census
http://www.minorbob.net/genealogy/fam00017.html
home me my loves travel ... family history
Murray Woolnough - Family History
Back to Index of Names
Husband: Thomas Woolnough Birth: 8 Feb 1804 Wilton, Norfolk, England Christening: 21 Feb 1804 Wilton, Norfolk, England Marriage: 25 Dec 1827 Susan Howe Icklingham All Saints, Icklingham, Suffolk, England Census: 1851 Emigration: 31 Mar 1855 Susan Howe Launceston, Tasmania, Australia aboard the 'Whirlwind' Arrival: 31 Mar 1855 Susan Howe Launceston, Tasmania, Australia per Whirlwind Marriage: 16 Oct 1867 -no-name-given- Tasmania, Australia Death: 8 Dec 1875 Tasmania, Australia Father: Stephen Woolnough Mother: Elizabeth Darkins Wife: Susan Howe Birth: 28 Sep 1806 Icklingham, Suffolk, England Baptism: 12 Oct 1806 Icklingham All Saints, Icklingham, Suffolk, England Marriage: 25 Dec 1827 Thomas Woolnough Icklingham All Saints, Icklingham, Suffolk, England Emigration: 31 Mar 1855 Thomas Woolnough Launceston, Tasmania, Australia aboard the 'Whirlwind' Arrival: 31 Mar 1855 Thomas Woolnough Launceston, Tasmania, Australia per Whirlwind Death: 22 Mar 1867 Tasmania, Australia

18. EPC Susan Howe
Includes the author's works in RealAudio format for downloading and the author's syllabi.
http://www.wings.buffalo.edu/epc/authors/howe/
Susan Howe LINEbreak Course Syllabi
Note: Susan Howe's Pierce-Arrow now available from New Directions. Online Works:

19. Susan Howe - The Academy Of American Poets
Contains a biography of the poet along with links to additional resources on howe's life and literary background. susan howe. susan howe was born in 1937 in Boston, Massachusetts.
http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=195

20. Biographies Of Suffragists
Brief profiles. Includes Antoinette Brown Blackwell, susan B. Anthony, Alice Stone Blackwell, Harriet Stanton Blatch, Amelia Bloomer, Carrie Chapman Catt, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Julia Ward howe, Lucretia Mott, Anna Howard Shaw, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone and Sojourner Truth.
http://www.rochester.edu/SBA/biographies.html
Biographies of Suffragists ACWL Home About ACWL ACWL Resources ACWL Programs ... Email the ACWL SUSAN B. ANTHONY For over fifty years Susan B. Anthony was the leader of the American woman suffrage movement. Born in Adams, Massachusetts on February 15, 1820, Anthony lived for many years in Rochester. When she died in 1906 only four states allowed women to vote, but Anthony's single-minded dedication to the cause of suffrage was largely responsible for the passage of the nineteenth amendment to the United States Constitution in 1920 giving women the vote. In 1872 Anthony was arrested for voting. ALICE STONE BLACKWELL After graduating from Boston University in 1881, Alice Stone Blackwell, the daughter of Lucy Stone and Henry Blackwell, began working on her parents' newspaper, The Women's Journal. She served as editor of the paper for the next thirty-five years. Blackwell was instrumental in bringing about a reconciliation between the two factions of the woman's suffrage movement in 1890 and served as the recording secretary of the new organization for many years. Besides her efforts for women's rights, Blackwell was also very active in the Women's Christian Temperance Union, the Women's Trade Union League, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and the American Peace Society. ANTOINETTE BROWN BLACKWELL Born in Henrietta, New York, Antoinette Brown Blackwell received a bachelor's degree from Oberlin College in 1847 and then, much to the consternation of the college, applied to study theology. Although she finished the requirements for the program in 1850, Oberlin did not allow her to graduate. Undeterred, she was ordained in 1853 as minister of the First Congregational Church in Butler and Savannah, Wayne County, New York, and thus became the first ordained woman minister of a recognized denomination in the United States.

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