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Lewis Hyde

Lewis Hyde‘s books include Common as Air: Revolution, Art, and Ownership (FSG, 2010), The Gift: Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property (Random House 1983; reprinted 2007), Trickster Makes This World: Mischief, Myth, and Art (FSG, 1998), and the book of poems This Error is the Sign of Love (Milkweed Editions, 1988). He has edited a volume of essays on Henry David Thoreau and a book of responses to the poetry of Allen Ginsberg, and has translated the selected poems of Vicente Aleixandre. Hyde’s many awards include grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Lannan Foundation, and the Guggenheim Foundation. In 1991 he was named a MacArthur Foundation Fellow. He is currently the Richard L. Thomas Chair in Creative Writing at Kenyon College.

In addition to Pablo Neruda, Hyde has translated Spain’s 1976 Nobel laureate, Vicente Aleixandre.

Nonfiction

Summer 2010

Liberty to Communicate

By Lewis Hyde

      Excerpt from Common as Air: Revolution, Art, and Ownership* Truth Has No Thinker In the late 1740s Benjamin Franklin and three of his Philadelphia friends conducted a series of scientific […]

Editor's Notes

Winter 1997

Editor’s Notes

By Lewis Hyde

American Memory, American Forgetfulness …. The photograph on our cover dates from 1915 and shows San Diego’s Victorian railway depot being demolished to make way for the newly completed Mission […]

Orpheus. Descending.

Winter 1996

The Land of the Dead

By Lewis Hyde

I. Coyote’s Impulse    In the winter of 1929-30, Archie Phinney went to the Fort Lapwai Indian reservation in northeastern Idaho to record stories told by his sixty-year-old mother, Wayfilatpu, […]

Poetry

Summer 1993

Elegy for John Cage

By Lewis Hyde

12 August 1992 Asked once to put his philosophy in a nutshell . . . he put it like this: ‘Get yourself out of whatever cage you find yourself in.’ […]

Editorials

Autumn 1990

The Freedom to Talk Dirt

By Lewis Hyde

The current debate over obscenity, government funding, and the arts has set me to thinking about dirt, what it is and why we have such trouble with it. “Dirt is […]

Cultures of Creativity: The Centennial Celebration of the Nobel Prizes

Spring 2001

Dead Gallop

By Pablo Neruda, translated by Lewis Hyde

From the Spanish. From Residencia en la Tierra (1925-31)   Like ashes, like seas breeding into themselves, in the sunken slowness, in the formless, or the way one hears from high […]

Cultures of Creativity: The Centennial Celebration of the Nobel Prizes

Spring 2001

The Widower’s Tango

By Pablo Neruda, translated by Lewis Hyde

From the Spanish.  From Residencia en la Tierra (1925-31)   Oh Maligna, now you've found the letter, now you've cried with rage, and you've insulted the memory of my mother, […]