The owl : a miscellany.

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Bibliographic Details
Uniform title:Owl (London, England)
Imprint:London : Martin Secker, 1919.
Description:1 online resource
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Journal
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12417127
Related Items:Print version: Owl (London, England)
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Graves, Robert, 1895-1985, editor.
Secker, Martin, 1882-1978, publisher.
Frequency:Quarterly
Date / volume:Began with No. 1 (May 1919); ceased with No. 2 (October 1919).
Notes:Description based on No. 1 (May 1919); title from PDF cover (Modernist Journals Project, viewed May 23, 2013).
Latest issue consulted: No. 2 (October 1919) (viewed May 23, 2013).
Summary:"Published during an era when the best-remembered literary magazines were decidedly experimental and political in tone, Robert Graves's short-lived quarterly The Owl is notable for its purposeful conservatism. As the forward to the first issue affirms, "The Owl has no politics, leads no new movement and is not even the organ of any particular generation." In keeping with this policy, Graves rejected more radical literary figures and featured an impressive group of established writers, including Thomas Hardy, W. H. Davies, John Galsworthy, and Walter de la Mare. As a traditional miscellany, The Owl also provided a forum for artists like Pamela Bianco, whose vibrantly colored drawings are featured in each issue, and for younger writers like John Crowe Ransom, Siegfried Sassoon, and Graves himself. It offers an important counterpoint to the more ideologically driven magazines favored by Eliot and Pound." -- Modernist Journals Project
Other form:Print version: Owl (London, England)