Journal article icon

Journal article

Poetry Bookshop Broadsides and Mass-Market Modernism

Abstract:
This article examines the cheaply mass-produced modernist poetry broadsides produced by Harold Monro’s Poetry Bookshop. It argues that these broadsides represented a dynamic—and remarkably successful—forgotten intervention into modern poetry publication, one which brought early modernist poetry into the homes and lives of ordinary readers. Neither antiquarian replicas nor limited-edition collectibles, the Poetry Bookshop broadsides, which flourished from 1913 to 1936, offer a new dimension to critical understandings of how modernist poetry circulated. The brightly coloured, cheap ‘Rhyme Sheets’ sold in their thousands, revealing an institution of modernist poetry deliberately seeking mass readership while also illuminating the complex temporal allegiances of early modernist aesthetics. At its close, the article offers a close reading of Ezra Pound’s Poetry Bookshop broadside ‘An Immorality’, to show how this distinctive print context could alter the experience of reading modernist poetry in the 1920s and 1930s.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions


Access Document


Files:
Publisher copy:
10.1093/res/hgaf039

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0009-0000-9444-104X


Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Journal:
The Review of English Studies More from this journal
Article number:
hgaf039
Publication date:
2025-07-04
DOI:
EISSN:
1471-6968
ISSN:
0034-6551


Language:
English
Source identifiers:
3087213
Deposit date:
2025-07-04
This ORA record was generated from metadata provided by an external service. It has not been edited by the ORA Team.

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP