Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Daphne

Autor Kristen Case
en Limba Engleză Paperback – iun 2025
A meditation on the centrality of predation to the Western lyric tradition. 

In dialogue with Wittgenstein's “On Certainty,” Ovid's Metamorphoses, Shakespeare's Hamlet, and Thomas Wyatt’s “Whoso List to Hunt,” among other works, Kristen Case's poems and lyric essays unearth the ways violence both disrupts and enables our ways of knowing—or approximating knowledge of—one another.
Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 12625 lei

Nou

Puncte Express: 189

Preț estimativ în valută:
2417 2626$ 2031£

Carte nepublicată încă

Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781961209206
ISBN-10: 1961209209
Pagini: 82
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Tupelo Press
Colecția Tupelo Press

Notă biografică

Kristen Case lives in Maine. She is the author of the poetry collections Little Arias and Principles of Economics. She won the Maine Literary Award in Poetry for both collections. She is also the author of scholarly essays and books on American literature, most recently Keeping Time: Henry David Thoreau's Kalendar.

Cuprins

“Whoso List to Hunt” 1
Hind 2
Daphne 3
Tonic 15
On Certainty 16
Tonic 35
Horror Vacui 36
Tonic 40
Unravish’d 41
Tonic 55
Plenum 56
Six Variations on Beethoven’s Opus 109 57
Night Sea 63
Early/Often 64
O 65
Tonic 68
Late Spring 69
Arks of Reprieve 70
Ritual 71
Plenum with Void 72
The Invisible Country of Remade Desire 73

Recenzii

"Illuminated by a daring and brilliant “alphabetical light,” Daphne by Kristen Case reveals “tree-life” as a “shivering and light-saturated language,” one where “possibilities of leaf-light are layered into a picture of infinity.” Dazzlingly erudite and intimately lyrical, Case’s poems embody a philosophy of desire within the embrace of the human imagination, one where the poet reconfigures trauma and memory. Daphne also explores the artistic realm of ekphrasis in an astute reading of Bernini’s statue of Daphne and Apollo while engaging in thoughtful dialogue with sister poems like “Ode on a Grecian Urn” by Keats: “Beauty is truth, truth beauty.” Offering notes on classical aesthetics interwoven with gorgeous seaweed wrack “inking” the Maine coast, this tree-lined book of laurels offers the radiant, mythological transformations of our daily lives: “In the moment love is consumed by its machinery, personhood slips out and seals itself in wood.”"

"A refrain piercingly thrills its way throughout the entirety of Kristen Case’s newest collection, “I long to be with you in any open space,” though she didn’t write those words herself. Their source is a letter from Francis Skinner, lover of Ludwig Wittgenstein, the philosopher who feared that an erotic life forsook a truthful one. That plaintive sentence returns us over and again to the touchstone cares of Daphne’s crisis: Eros and Void, longing and open space. I mean simply to suggest that Kristen Case is at work in a kind of first-philosophy, which is now as it has always been, also a first-poetry, and the primary tenets of her concern are the very mythological fundaments that occupied Hesiod, Parmenides, and Empedocles. Case reminds us, as a genuine poet must, that we have yet to resolve the oppositions of our nature: mind and body, soul and thing, voice and void. In doing so, she traces lyric’s ravished eons in which violence and love bewilderingly interpenetrate, from Daphne and Apollo, to Keats and the Grecian Urn. How intimate thought is in the body that holds the thinking, how intricate the voice that sings of woundedness out the wound that is the mouth. In essays that wild into lyric, in lyrics that assay her own experience, we find a book skeptical of the traditions it also believes in, such is the crux of being in the penetralium, where eros is also epistemology."

"What does tradition afford the figure eclipsed or possessed by its foundational gestures? Drawing on sources as diverse as the haunting myth of Daphne and Apollo and Ludwig Wittgenstein’s On Certainty, Kristen Case engages the Western tradition to examine the way violence disrupts and yet paradoxically unleashes understanding, illuminating the ways that knowledge is inextricably tied to experiences of both beauty and brutality. The recurring refrain from Wittgenstein's lover, “I long to be with you in any open space,” serves as a poignant motif throughout the collection’s brave yearning for connection that transcends predatory impulses. Daphne’s tonic utterances make way for such an opening."