The Little Review
Learn about this topic in these articles:
Chicago literary renaissance
- In Chicago literary renaissance
…by Harriet Monroe, and the Little Review (1914–29), founded by Margaret Anderson—published exciting new verse by Masters, Sandburg, and other local poets such as Vachel Lindsay. Dell, a journalist associated with the Friday Literary Review (1908), the weekly literary supplement to the Chicago Evening Post, was the center of a
Read More
contribution of Anderson
- In Margaret Anderson
…founder and editor of the Little Review magazine, the “little magazine” in which she introduced works by many of the best-known American and British writers of the 20th century.
Read More
development as little magazine
- In little magazine: Leading periodicals and figures of the movement
…erratic and often more sensational The Little Review (1914–29) of Margaret Anderson. A group of English magazines appeared in the second decade of the 20th century, of which the Egoist (1914–19) and Blast (1914–15) were most conspicuous, as well as transition (1927–38), founded in Paris by American editors Eugene and…
Read More