Edited by Alfred Kreymborg, this short-lived little magazine played a major role in modernizing American poetry, with an emphasis on free verse.

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Its modest title notwithstanding, The Little Review probably did more to promote modernism than any other American journal, representing in its pages dozens of international art movements and the leading avant-garde figures of the day. It’s also where most of Joyce’s Ulysses first appeared in print.

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Founded and edited by Harriet Monroe in Chicago in 1912 and still running today, this magazine played a major role in creating an audience for modernist poetry.

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