Oxford Poetry

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Oxford Poetry
Oxfordpoetry.jpg
EditorLuke Allan
Former editors Aldous Huxley (1916)
Dorothy Sayers (1917–18)
Siegfried Sassoon (1919)
Robert Graves (1921)
Harold Acton (1924)
W. H. Auden (1927)
W. H. Auden, Cecil Day-Lewis (1927)
Louis MacNeice, Stephen Spender (1929)
Kingsley Amis (1949)
Donald Hall, Geoffrey Hill (1953)
Anthony Thwaite (1954)
Adrian Mitchell (1955)
John Fuller (1960)
Categories Poetry
FrequencyTwice a year
Circulation 2,000
Publisher Partus Press
First issue1910
CountryUnited Kingdom
Based in Oxford, England
LanguageEnglish
Website http://www.oxfordpoetry.com/
ISSN 1465-6213

Oxford Poetry is a literary magazine based in Oxford, England. [1] It is currently edited by Luke Allan. The magazine is published by Partus Press.

Contents

Founded in 1910 by Basil Blackwell, its editors have included Dorothy L. Sayers, Aldous Huxley, Robert Graves, Vera Brittain, Kingsley Amis, Anthony Thwaite, John Fuller and Bernard O'Donoghue.

Among the other authors to have appeared in Oxford Poetry are Fleur Adcock, A. Alvarez, W. H. Auden, Anne Carson, Nevill Coghill, David Constantine, Robert Crawford, Carol Ann Duffy, Elaine Feinstein, Graham Greene, Seamus Heaney, W. N. Herbert, Geoffrey Hill, Christopher Isherwood, Elizabeth Jennings, Jenny Joseph, Stephen Knight, Ronald Knox, Philip Larkin, C. Day-Lewis, Michael Longley, Louis MacNeice, Peter McDonald, Christopher Middleton, Andrew Motion, Paul Muldoon, Tom Paulin, Mario Petrucci, Craig Raine, Jo Shapcott, Stephen Spender, George Szirtes, J. R. R. Tolkien, Susan Wicks and Charles Wright. Traditionally the magazine publishes winners of Oxford's Newdigate Prize.

Editors of Oxford Poetry

Until the Second World War

Post-War

Oxford Poetry re-launched

21st century

See also

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References

  1. Phipps, John (22 March 2019). "Oxford's thriving poetry scene". Financial Times . Retrieved 28 March 2021.