<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<metadata><mediatype>audio</mediatype><identifier>naropa_robert_creeley_lecture_on_jack</identifier><type>sound</type><publicdate>2004-06-09 19:41:37</publicdate><creator>Creeley, Robert</creator><description>First half of a lecture by Robert Creeley on Jack Spicer and Robert Duncan.  Creeley discusses dreams, the Earth Attractive, traditional forms, Charles Hartman's Free Verse, Robert Frost, Aristotle and tragedy, and restricted verse. (Continues on 86p014.) Keywords: New American Poetry, objectivist poetry, Black Mountain School, art in literature, music in literature, San Francisco Renaissance, modernism</description><licenseurl>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd-nc/1.0/</licenseurl><date>1986-06-23 00:00:00</date><collection>naropa</collection><title>Robert Creeley lecture on Jack Spicer and Robert Duncan - Part 1</title><uploader>parker@archive.org</uploader><addeddate>2004-06-08 11:36:25</addeddate><adder>parker@archive.org</adder><pick>0</pick><runtime>1:30:32</runtime><updatedate>2004-06-28 16:23:29</updatedate><updater>parkerthompson</updater><taper>Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics</taper><public>1</public><publisher>Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics</publisher><numeric_id>5847</numeric_id><collection>audio_bookspoetry</collection></metadata>
