The year
1922 isn’t especially remembered as a year of major significance (it wasn’t a
presidential election year, for one thing), but it was a momentous year in
history nonetheless. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) was formed after
five years of civil war. Gandhi was sentenced to prison in India by the
British. The first successful treatment of diabetes with insulin was reported
in Canada. The BBC was formed in the UK. The Lincoln Memorial was dedicated. Reader’s Digest was launched, and soon
became the most popular magazine in America. And speaking of civil war, one
erupted in Ireland.
In
literature, 1922 is now considered to have witnessed a revolution in fiction and
poetry. More than a decade later, the writer Willa Cather
called 1922 “the year the world broke in two,” and that sentiment has been
borrowed for the title of one of two recent books on what happened in the
literary world that year. – events that still affect literature almost 100
years later.
To
continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
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