In Women's Work are many the leading modern poets for whom there is no or little space in mixed anthologies, as it is taken up by male poets, by means better.
And you can read the rest of the essay on this subject, from which I've excerpted, and 3 pages of bibliography to give you many sources of eminence who write on this subject. I could not sell the mixed anthology I'd first asked to do. In fact, the only anthology I could sell - as a widely published and experienced editor and writer - was a women's one, so it appears the pigeon-holing and segregating of women poets comes from elsewhere, which indeed is also the experience of my peers: which anecdotal evidence seems insufficient.
Do buy the book or take it out from the library if you're interested in the subject, or the poets for that matter. It is a subject I felt passionate enough to devote 3 years to, in compiling and writing Intro to this book. I would have thought the book might interest some here, as addressing precisely so many parts of the discussion here.
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