Jean-Michel Rabate has this note in "Language-Sexuality and Idealogy in Ezra
Pound's Cantos" concerning Proudhon-Pound -
 "On this point, see Eva Hesse, "Ezra Pound, von Sinn und Wahnsinn",
pp.198-222; and, for a more detailed presentation of the Proudhon-Marx
controversy, Eva Hesse, "Die Wurzeln der Revolution, Theorien der
individuellen und der kollektiven Freiheit (Munich: Hanser, 1974) pp.336-73.

    Other discussion-

    Now do I hear the left shoe singing the tune the right one once sang?

"'Has packed the Supreme Court
     so they will declare anything he does constitutional.'
                                      Senator Wheeler, 1939."
                                           Canto 100
CDM

----------
>From: Carrol Cox <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Query re Proudhon
>Date: Sun, Dec 17, 2000, 6:22 PM
>

> I can't remember if this question has ever been previously
> raised or not. Does Pound anywhere in his works or letters
> refer to the French anarchist theorist, Proudhon, or cite
> his works? Is there any other evidence as to Pound's
> knowledge (or non-knowledge) of Proudhon?
>
> Carrol Cox
>