The Trial Of Ezra Pound - Presented by Sean Street - BBC Radio 3 - Sunday 20 July 2008
To mark 2008's 50th anniversary of his release, historian Sean Street investigates how Ezra Pound (1885-1972), one of the 20th century's most important poets, was accused of treason by the US Government and held for years in a mental hospital after he made a series of anti-American and anti-Semitic broadcasts in Italy.
The programme investigates the significance of the case today, asking whether he committed treason or inconveniently used his right to free speech. With contributions from Pound's daughter Mary de Rachewlitz, his biographer David Moody and the playwright Bernard Kops, who wrote a play about Pound, in order to find out how we should view the complex and controversial poet.
See also:
A Poet's Legacy: As Neo-Fascists Claim Ezra Pound, His Family Says, 'Hands Off'
To mark 2008's 50th anniversary of his release, historian Sean Street investigates how Ezra Pound (1885-1972), one of the 20th century's most important poets, was accused of treason by the US Government and held for years in a mental hospital after he made a series of anti-American and anti-Semitic broadcasts in Italy.
The programme investigates the significance of the case today, asking whether he committed treason or inconveniently used his right to free speech. With contributions from Pound's daughter Mary de Rachewlitz, his biographer David Moody and the playwright Bernard Kops, who wrote a play about Pound, in order to find out how we should view the complex and controversial poet.
See also:
A Poet's Legacy: As Neo-Fascists Claim Ezra Pound, His Family Says, 'Hands Off'
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