Anne Carson: The Glass Essayist
Autor Elizabeth Sarah Colesen Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 oct 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197680919
ISBN-10: 0197680917
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 1 b/w illustration
Dimensiuni: 160 x 229 x 41 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197680917
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 1 b/w illustration
Dimensiuni: 160 x 229 x 41 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
By close reading Carson as she so exactingly reads her own temperaments, Coles models with striking delicacy the very entwinement of analytical attention and compositional grace that recurs throughout this book's archive. This is a celebration of the essay's potential as a limber performance of thought, demonstrating what we might continue to learn about unlocking scholarly forms from the range and rebelliousness of Carson's critical itineraries.
Illuminating and original, The Glass Essayist takes the full measure of Anne Carson's achievement to date, from early commentaries on Greek poetry, through poems, translations, essays, lectures, and multi-media collaborations. Via dazzling close readings, Coles makes a bold, compelling argument about Carson's notorious reflexivity, anachronism, and parody in responding to classical and modern writers: these modes reveal 'the unsanctioned emotional life of scholarship,' exposing what is at stake in reading itself. With implications for debates about lyric, translation, performativity, and criticism after critique, this is a work of profound critical sympathy and insight.
Elizabeth Sarah Coles does a thorough and intelligent job of discussing Carson's career. The monograph covers everything from Eros the Bittersweet to H of H Playbook (2021), a facsimile collage "playbook" - a term that suggests both a collection of strategies for a team playing a game and a playbook in the early modern theatrical sense - about Euripides' Herakles. It is serious and erudite in its scholarship and includes, satisfyingly, hefty footnotes, a bibliography and an index.
I admire Elizabeth Coles as a stylist at the level of the sentence but also as a thinker. More than a close reading and focused study of Carson, Anne Carson: The Glass Essayist elucidates how Carson points the way toward/enacts new forms of thinking and essaying.
To capture something as quicksilver as the work of the great Anne Carson is an achievement in itself but to elaborate a concept ("performative form") that divulges how Carson's aesthetic intentions manifest and effloresce on the page is a mark of brilliance. Elizabeth Sarah Coles's Anne Carson: The Glass Essayist proceeds with aphoristic flair and an erudite array of literary quotations, but what will remain with me is her dazzling invitation to view Carson's oeuvre as a ne plus ultra of mimesis, where the reader participates in a poetic performance "reproducing or mirroring an original experience so that it might happen again in reading or recital."
Illuminating and original, The Glass Essayist takes the full measure of Anne Carson's achievement to date, from early commentaries on Greek poetry, through poems, translations, essays, lectures, and multi-media collaborations. Via dazzling close readings, Coles makes a bold, compelling argument about Carson's notorious reflexivity, anachronism, and parody in responding to classical and modern writers: these modes reveal 'the unsanctioned emotional life of scholarship,' exposing what is at stake in reading itself. With implications for debates about lyric, translation, performativity, and criticism after critique, this is a work of profound critical sympathy and insight.
Elizabeth Sarah Coles does a thorough and intelligent job of discussing Carson's career. The monograph covers everything from Eros the Bittersweet to H of H Playbook (2021), a facsimile collage "playbook" - a term that suggests both a collection of strategies for a team playing a game and a playbook in the early modern theatrical sense - about Euripides' Herakles. It is serious and erudite in its scholarship and includes, satisfyingly, hefty footnotes, a bibliography and an index.
I admire Elizabeth Coles as a stylist at the level of the sentence but also as a thinker. More than a close reading and focused study of Carson, Anne Carson: The Glass Essayist elucidates how Carson points the way toward/enacts new forms of thinking and essaying.
To capture something as quicksilver as the work of the great Anne Carson is an achievement in itself but to elaborate a concept ("performative form") that divulges how Carson's aesthetic intentions manifest and effloresce on the page is a mark of brilliance. Elizabeth Sarah Coles's Anne Carson: The Glass Essayist proceeds with aphoristic flair and an erudite array of literary quotations, but what will remain with me is her dazzling invitation to view Carson's oeuvre as a ne plus ultra of mimesis, where the reader participates in a poetic performance "reproducing or mirroring an original experience so that it might happen again in reading or recital."
Notă biografică
Elizabeth Sarah Coles is a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona. She studied at the University of Cambridge, winning the Wood-Whistler Medal and Scholarship, and at Queen Mary, University of London. She is co-editor of Wild Analysis (2022).