Lola Ridge
Lola Ridge  | |
|---|---|
| Born | Rose Emily Ridge 12 December 1873 Dublin  | 
| Died | 19 May 1941 (aged 67) | 
| Nationality | New Zealander, American, Irish | 
| Genre | Poetry | 
| Literary movement | Greenwich Village | 
| Notable awards | Guggenheim Fellowship,  Shelley Memorial Award  | 
Lola Ridge (born Rose Emily Ridge; 12 December 1873 – 19 May 1941) was an Irish-born New Zealand-American anarchist and modernist poet, and an influential editor of avant-garde, feminist, and Marxist publications. She is best known for her long poems and poetic sequences, published in numerous magazines and collected in five books of poetry.
Along with other political poets of the early Modernist period, Ridge has received renewed critical attention since the late 20th century and has been lauded by contemporary poets for her choice and ability to write about urban spaces in her poems. A selection of her poetry was published in 2007, and a biography, Anything That Burns You: A Portrait of Lola Ridge, Radical Poet (by Terese Svoboda) was published in 2016.