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Words That Helped

Quotations Collected by the Photographer Robert Adams

Words That Helped( )
Text by: Adams, Robert
Stieglitz, Alfred
Basho,
Arbus, Diane
Dickinson, Emily
ISBN:978-3-96999-233-3
Publication Date:Jun 2024
Publisher:Steidl GmbH & Co. OHG
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $40.00
Book Description:

A collection of quotations compiled by Robert Adams that have inspired his work and life for almost 60 years

This volume is a personal compilation of quotations that have played a vital role in orienting Robert Adams' life as a photographer. Copied down in private notebooks collected over six decades and now edited for the general reader, this meditative tapestry of words addresses the question: "What are the facts of our situation, and how might we respond?" From poets,...
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Book Details
Pages:368
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):5.46 x 8.19 Inches
Book Weight:1.584 Pounds
Author Biography
(Text by)
Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts on December 10, 1830. Although one of America's most acclaimed poets, the bulk of her work was not published until well after her death on May 15, 1886. The few poems published in her lifetime were not received with any great fanfare. After her death, Dickinson's sister Lavinia found over 1,700 poems Emily had written and stashed away in a drawer -- the accumulation of a life's obsession with words. Critics have agreed that Dickinson's poetry was well ahead of its time. Today she is considered one of the best poets of the English language.

Except for a year spent at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in South Hadley, Dickinson spent her entire life in the family home in Amherst, Massachusetts. She never married and began to withdraw from society, eventually becoming a recluse.

Dickinson's poetry engages the reader and requires his or her participation. Full of highly charged metaphors, her free verse and choice of words are best understood when read aloud. Dickinson's punctuation and capitalization, not orthodox by Victorian standards and called "spasmodic" by her critics, give greater emphasis to her meanings.

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