Between Two Fires: Transnationalism and Cold War Poetry
Autor Justin Quinnen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 sep 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198744436
ISBN-10: 0198744439
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 148 x 220 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198744439
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 148 x 220 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Between Two Fires provocatively revises and considerably expands the basis for considering political poetry in English from 1950 to 1990... Quinn writes as a poet-critic quick to recognize the heavy hand of literary politics, sharply aware of translation problems and ready to appreciate the power of poetic traditions in building solidarity across national borders.
[Quinn] himself crossed several checkpoints and negotiated barriers that usually defeat authors of books about Cold War ... a very rare book on poetry ... surprising and fulfilling.
The central sections of Quinns rich book will provide those scholars a useful model for thinking about how poetry, resilient under pressure, circulated and signified during the Cold War, as well as about how the Cold War and its poetry continue to shape the transnational literary dimensions of our own time.
Justin Quinns Between Two Fires: Transnationalism and Cold War Poetry signals a necessary refinement in explorations of the effects of the Cold War on major writers of the period. In this book, the tell-tale word ideological -- so often deployed for a blunt left-wing critique of the insidious hegemony of bourgeois power structures -- is subjected to the scrutiny of precise historical and social contextualisation, thereby enhancing Quinns focus on selected transnational engagements facilitated by the translation and reception of poets across the Iron Curtain.
Instead of overestimating breaches, demarcation lines and guarded frontiers, Quinn traces all kinds of rhizomatic, oblique, isomorphic or mirroring connections, juxtaposing poetic programmes, practices and pursuits from the anglophone world with those from beyond the Iron Curtain. What emerges from this skilful survey is that the Cold War can be reconsidered as a literary machine that has acted as a prism refracting literary policies and aesthetic attitudes, and thus shaping the literatures from the period ... [strikes] a fine balance between authoritative criticisms of models of transnationalism, close reading of poetry's delicate movements across languages, and a fair examination of political dimensions lurking behind poetics oscillating between dissidence and compliance.
Between Two Fires sets an example for the scholarship he solicits, as well as being a powerful demonstration of the need for contemporary criticism to move beyond anachronistic nationalism in order to understand the global context in which culture operates.
[Justin Quinn's] is a deliberately dissenting voice, and Between Two Fires a book that aspires to leaving a mark by combining well-honed scholarship in literary traditions less familiar to western readers with bold revisions of major poets of the English language. For the reasons sketched above, and more, Quinn's revisions are bound to raise eyebrows and prompt oppositional responses but they ensure that his book will never be received with indifference.
[Quinn] himself crossed several checkpoints and negotiated barriers that usually defeat authors of books about Cold War ... a very rare book on poetry ... surprising and fulfilling.
The central sections of Quinns rich book will provide those scholars a useful model for thinking about how poetry, resilient under pressure, circulated and signified during the Cold War, as well as about how the Cold War and its poetry continue to shape the transnational literary dimensions of our own time.
Justin Quinns Between Two Fires: Transnationalism and Cold War Poetry signals a necessary refinement in explorations of the effects of the Cold War on major writers of the period. In this book, the tell-tale word ideological -- so often deployed for a blunt left-wing critique of the insidious hegemony of bourgeois power structures -- is subjected to the scrutiny of precise historical and social contextualisation, thereby enhancing Quinns focus on selected transnational engagements facilitated by the translation and reception of poets across the Iron Curtain.
Instead of overestimating breaches, demarcation lines and guarded frontiers, Quinn traces all kinds of rhizomatic, oblique, isomorphic or mirroring connections, juxtaposing poetic programmes, practices and pursuits from the anglophone world with those from beyond the Iron Curtain. What emerges from this skilful survey is that the Cold War can be reconsidered as a literary machine that has acted as a prism refracting literary policies and aesthetic attitudes, and thus shaping the literatures from the period ... [strikes] a fine balance between authoritative criticisms of models of transnationalism, close reading of poetry's delicate movements across languages, and a fair examination of political dimensions lurking behind poetics oscillating between dissidence and compliance.
Between Two Fires sets an example for the scholarship he solicits, as well as being a powerful demonstration of the need for contemporary criticism to move beyond anachronistic nationalism in order to understand the global context in which culture operates.
[Justin Quinn's] is a deliberately dissenting voice, and Between Two Fires a book that aspires to leaving a mark by combining well-honed scholarship in literary traditions less familiar to western readers with bold revisions of major poets of the English language. For the reasons sketched above, and more, Quinn's revisions are bound to raise eyebrows and prompt oppositional responses but they ensure that his book will never be received with indifference.
Notă biografică
Justin Quinn is Associate Professor at the University of West Bohemia. He has published two studies of American poetry, and the Cambridge Introduction to Irish Poetry (2008). A poet also, his most recent collection is Early House (2015).