Press And Harry Crosby example essay topic
In the years following his escape from death in World War I, Harry Crosby had become increasingly obsessed with death, linking this into his own idiosyncratic worship of the sun, a glittering, yet black sun whose symbol and iconography dominated his writings and even his signature. (Although the Black Sun Press continued to publish the works of Caresse and of their friends, Harry's contribution was his "sun" works - poetry, prose and art on the themes of sun, death, speed and blackness.) In addition to the Crosby's works, the Black Sun Press also published lavishly bound, typographically impeccable versions of unusual books covering their interest, "The Fall of the House of Usher", their Hindu Love Book, and letters to Harry's cousin, Waste Berry, by Henry James. However, as their literary interests began to mature and their world to enlarge, they also published the works of their friends - D.H. Lawrence's "The Sun" and "Escaped Cock" [sometimes reprinted under the title "The Man Who Died"], James Joyce's "Tales Told of Shem and Shaun" [work later incorporated into Finnegan's Wake], and Kay Boyle's short stories. In the climactic year, 1929, fourteen works were produced.
And in December 1929 Harry Crosby died his sun-death in a suicide pact with a young Boston socialite. From Shelley Cox", Introduction: The Black Sun Press", I CarbS 3: 2 (1977), 3-4.