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During the early twentieth century, a period now dubbed the modern era, many now-famous writers struggled to find milieus in which to display their work. Writers like T.S. Eliot, William Carlos Williams, and Marianne Moore felt the tremendous impact of the advent of "little magazines," publications that featured up and coming writers and their work. Boston and Chicago were hotbeds for the exhibition of these writers, and from them emerged two major magazines, the Dial and Poetry. The Dial was edited by Margaret Fuller with the help of Bostonian Ralph Waldo Emerson. Poetry was founded over seventy years
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