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Foreword | ||
This extraordinary woman | 3 | |
From Mississippi to Oklahoma | 3 | |
Starting out as a poet | 6 | |
In the world of New York | 12 | |
Publishing her Sea-change | 16 | |
In the Pan-American literary tradition | 19 | |
Speaking out for Pan-American women | 25 | |
With the world on her back | 30 | |
Doing for others and for herself | 32 | |
Working for Pan-American union | 42 | |
Translating Ecuador's premier poet | 46 | |
Doing The American story | 49 | |
Getting Faulkner to travel | 59 | |
In the end | 66 | |
Rich port | 77 | |
Of writing verse | 78 | |
Planet | 79 | |
Hacienda | 80 | |
Dies Irae | 81 | |
Moonrise | 82 | |
On going ashore | 83 | |
Acacia Island | 84 | |
Night of San Juan | 85 | |
Atavian | 86 | |
Caribbean marsh | 87 | |
Visitant | 88 | |
Deliverance | 89 | |
Carib garden | 90 | |
Stalactite | 91 | |
Deserted orchard | 92 | |
Albatross | 93 | |
Wayfarer | 94 | |
Summertime notation in a troubled world | 95 | |
Apology for all that blooms in time of crisis | 96 | |
Nightpiece | 97 | |
By the Caribbean one remembers the prairie | 98 | |
Mushroom town | 99 | |
The thought of you | 108 | |
The stars are colored blossoms | 109 | |
Lips you were not anhungered for | 110 | |
Survival | 111 | |
April wind | 112 | |
I have had enough of glamour | 113 | |
A woman's song | 114 | |
Choice | 115 | |
Gifts | 116 | |
Imprisoned | 117 | |
The confidante | 118 | |
Mid-western | 119 | |
Tropic rain | 120 | |
A song of dreams come true | 121 | |
The seeker | 122 | |
Running water (Alfonsina Storni, Argentina, 1892-1938) | 125 | |
You say I forget you, Celio (Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz; Mexico, 1651-95) | 126 | |
The rose (Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz) | 127 | |
Love (Jaime Torres Bodet; Mexico, 1902-74) | 128 | |
Proletarians (Luis Munoz Marin; Puerto Rico, 1898-1980) | 130 | |
Pamphlet (Luis Munoz Marin) | 131 | |
Brother dog (Luis Anibal Sanchez; Ecuador, 1902-22) | 132 | |
Horses of the conquistadores (Jose Santos Chocano; Peru, 1875-1934) | 133 | |
Nameless islands (Jorge Carrera Andrade; Ecuador, 1902-78) | 136 | |
Sunday (Jorge Carrera Andrade) | 138 | |
The guest (Jorge Carrera Andrade) | 139 | |
Vocation of the mirror (Jorge Carrera Andrade) | 140 | |
Place of origin (Jorge Carrera Andrade) | 141 | |
Nameless district (Jorge Carrera Andrade) | 142 | |
Biography for the use of the birds (Jorge Carrera Andrade) | 143 | |
On someone's death (Eugenio Florit; Cuba, 1903-99) | 145 | |
Mob of mountains (Jose Varallanos; Peru, 1907-97) | 146 | |
Andean crossing (Alejandro Peralta; Peru, 1899-1973) | 147 | |
Provincial moment (Asdrubal Villalobos; Costa Rica, 1893-1985) | 149 | |
Elegy to the invented woman (Xavier Abril; Peru, 1905-90) | 150 | |
Vision of moth-eaten pianos falling to pieces (Cesar Moro; Peru, 1903-56) | 151 | |
The illustrated world (Cesar Moro) | 152 | |
Parable of generosity (Antonio Spinetti Dini; Venezuela, 1900-41) | 153 | |
Man's road (Enrique Pena Barrenechea; Peru, 1905-88) | 155 | |
Dregs (Cesar Vallejo; Peru, 1892-1938) | 156 | |
Aboriginal mother (Angelina Acuna; Guatemala, 1905-) | 157 | |
Poetry every day | 161 | |
Contemporary Spanish American poetry | 165 | |
A charming Mexican lady | 176 | |
Brother of Poe | 183 | |
Pan-American women | 190 | |
In behalf of the equal rights treaty | 193 | |
Paulina Luisi, internationalist | 195 | |
Harriet Monroe : poet and pioneer | 197 | |
Notes from a feminist's travel diary | 200 | |
Puerto Rican women writers : the record of one hundred years | 203 | |
Cuban literature | 208 | |
Cultural interchanges between the Americas | 216 | |
The inter-American commission of women : a new international venture | 222 | |
Jose de San Martin | 230 | |
Juan de Castellanos in the perspective of 350 years | 234 | |
Two seventeenth-century pen-women : Anne Bradstreet of Massachusetts and Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz of Mexico | 244 | |
Flowering in a phrase | 250 | |
Eugenio Maria de Hostos : after one hundred years | 252 | |
Birds, beasts, and flowers, and Indians | 256 | |
Translating the untranslatable : can poetry stand the change? | 259 | |
Governments invest in culture | 266 | |
App. A | Letter from Muna Lee (1915) | 275 |
App. B | Letter from Gloria Munoz Arjona (1965) | 276 |
App. C | Letter from Frances Klafter nee Lee (2000) | 277 |
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Add A Pan-American Life: Selected Poetry and Prose of Muna Lee, The extraordinary Muna Lee was a brilliant writer, lyric poet, translator, diplomat, feminist and rights activist, and, above all, a Pan-Americanist. During the twentieth century, she helped shape the literary and social landscapes of the Americas. This i, A Pan-American Life: Selected Poetry and Prose of Muna Lee to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add A Pan-American Life: Selected Poetry and Prose of Muna Lee, The extraordinary Muna Lee was a brilliant writer, lyric poet, translator, diplomat, feminist and rights activist, and, above all, a Pan-Americanist. During the twentieth century, she helped shape the literary and social landscapes of the Americas. This i, A Pan-American Life: Selected Poetry and Prose of Muna Lee to your collection on WonderClub |