The International Reception of T. S. Eliot: Continuum Reception Studies
Editat de Elisabeth Däumer, Shyamal Bagcheeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 iun 2007
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780826490148
ISBN-10: 082649014X
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.87 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Seria Continuum Reception Studies
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 082649014X
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.87 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Seria Continuum Reception Studies
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
This is the first truly international collection of essays on Eliot covering Eliot's reception Europe, South America, Australasia and the Middle East
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Shyamal Bagchee
Tradition and the Postcolonial Talent: T. S. Eliot versus E.K. Brathwaite - Matthew Hart
Two Modernisms: T.S. Eliot and La Nouvelle Revue Française - William Marx
(Re)modernizing Eliot: Eva Hesse and Das Wüste Land - Elisabeth Däumer
Translated Eliot: Lucian Blaga's Strategies for Survival and the Soviet Colonization of Romania - Sean Cotter
T.S. Eliot and Modernism in Mid-Twentieth-Century Israel - Leonore Gerstein
The Shadow of Eliot Across Bengali Poetry of the 1930s- Shirshendu Chakrabarti
T. S. Eliot in Iceland: A Historical Portrait - Astradur Eysteinsson and Eysteinn Thorvaldsson
'By the Arena . . . Il Decaduto': T. S. Eliot & / in Italy - Stefano Maria Casella
Multiple Voices, Single Identity: T.S. Eliot's Criticism and Spanish Poetry - Santiago Rodriguez Guerrero-Strachan
China's Reception of T. S. Eliot - Lihui Liu
'In the Juvescence of the Year'-T.S. Eliot's Impact and Reverberations in Japan 1930-2005 - Shunichi Takayanagi
Impersonality, Imitation, and Influence: T.S. Eliot and A.J.M. Smith - Brian Trehearne
Jorge Louis Borges Rewrites T.S. Eliot - Juan E. De Castro
'Somewhat Weird Reading': Czeslaw Milosz and T.S. Eliot - Magda Heydel
'The Politics of Friendship': T.S.Eliot in Germany through E.R. Curtius's Looking Glass - J.H. Copley
Why Eliot? Cross-Cultural Reading and its (Dis)contents - Kinereth Meyer
T. S. Eliot: Poet of My Bengali Childhood - Srimati Mukherjee
'Reported to me from Sydney, Australia': Reading Eliot Down Under and in the Mother Tongue - Sean Pryor
List of abbreviations
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Shyamal Bagchee
Tradition and the Postcolonial Talent: T. S. Eliot versus E.K. Brathwaite - Matthew Hart
Two Modernisms: T.S. Eliot and La Nouvelle Revue Française - William Marx
(Re)modernizing Eliot: Eva Hesse and Das Wüste Land - Elisabeth Däumer
Translated Eliot: Lucian Blaga's Strategies for Survival and the Soviet Colonization of Romania - Sean Cotter
T.S. Eliot and Modernism in Mid-Twentieth-Century Israel - Leonore Gerstein
The Shadow of Eliot Across Bengali Poetry of the 1930s- Shirshendu Chakrabarti
T. S. Eliot in Iceland: A Historical Portrait - Astradur Eysteinsson and Eysteinn Thorvaldsson
'By the Arena . . . Il Decaduto': T. S. Eliot & / in Italy - Stefano Maria Casella
Multiple Voices, Single Identity: T.S. Eliot's Criticism and Spanish Poetry - Santiago Rodriguez Guerrero-Strachan
China's Reception of T. S. Eliot - Lihui Liu
'In the Juvescence of the Year'-T.S. Eliot's Impact and Reverberations in Japan 1930-2005 - Shunichi Takayanagi
Impersonality, Imitation, and Influence: T.S. Eliot and A.J.M. Smith - Brian Trehearne
Jorge Louis Borges Rewrites T.S. Eliot - Juan E. De Castro
'Somewhat Weird Reading': Czeslaw Milosz and T.S. Eliot - Magda Heydel
'The Politics of Friendship': T.S.Eliot in Germany through E.R. Curtius's Looking Glass - J.H. Copley
Why Eliot? Cross-Cultural Reading and its (Dis)contents - Kinereth Meyer
T. S. Eliot: Poet of My Bengali Childhood - Srimati Mukherjee
'Reported to me from Sydney, Australia': Reading Eliot Down Under and in the Mother Tongue - Sean Pryor
Index
Recenzii
"In a valuable contribution to the internationalization of modernist studies, the essays in this collection illuminate the cross-national, cross-cultural, even cross-hemispheric dialogue between Eliot and his global interlocutors. Exploring how writers from the Caribbean to Germany and Spain, to India, China, and Japan have absorbed and refashioned Eliot's work, these essays trace the fascinating transmutations of Eliot in an astonishing array of local traditions and indigenous languages across the world." - Professor Jahan Ramazani, University of Virginia, USA.
"An important contribution of the book as a whole is the insight it provides into those aspects of Eliot's poetry, drama and critical essays which exerted the most influence on the countries represented. . . [It] contains a number of insightful and interesting essays which reveal in a variety of approaches the truly global influence of Eliot. Its most valuable contribution to Eliot scholarship is in its opening up for further study the impact of his works throughout the world." - Nancy D. Hargrove, Review of English Studies
"Addressing a Washington University audience in 1953, T. S. Eliot opined that for an author to have enduring significance abroad, foreign readers must identify with aspect of his or her work...Däumer and Bagchee's collection, while necessarily limited as a pioneering effort to recognize Eliot's worldwide reception, is commendable in its attempt to negotiate the complex issues that arise at junctures of cultural interface. As this book demonstrates, the Eliot that has emerged on the other side of these borders has often differed from the poet-critic Anglo-American readers know. More compellingly, and to the great credit of this volume, readers will undoubtedly recognize 'identity as well as difference.'" - John D. Morgenstern, Time Present: The Newsletter of the T.S. Eliot Society, January 2009 (Also listed in T.S. Eliot Bibliography 2007).
'This collection gathers fragments of Eliot's influence from five continents and more than a dozen countries...students of Eliot are left with a broader, more nuanced understanding of his work and its significance.'
Reviewed in Routledge ABES
"An important contribution of the book as a whole is the insight it provides into those aspects of Eliot's poetry, drama and critical essays which exerted the most influence on the countries represented. . . [It] contains a number of insightful and interesting essays which reveal in a variety of approaches the truly global influence of Eliot. Its most valuable contribution to Eliot scholarship is in its opening up for further study the impact of his works throughout the world." - Nancy D. Hargrove, Review of English Studies
"Addressing a Washington University audience in 1953, T. S. Eliot opined that for an author to have enduring significance abroad, foreign readers must identify with aspect of his or her work...Däumer and Bagchee's collection, while necessarily limited as a pioneering effort to recognize Eliot's worldwide reception, is commendable in its attempt to negotiate the complex issues that arise at junctures of cultural interface. As this book demonstrates, the Eliot that has emerged on the other side of these borders has often differed from the poet-critic Anglo-American readers know. More compellingly, and to the great credit of this volume, readers will undoubtedly recognize 'identity as well as difference.'" - John D. Morgenstern, Time Present: The Newsletter of the T.S. Eliot Society, January 2009 (Also listed in T.S. Eliot Bibliography 2007).
'This collection gathers fragments of Eliot's influence from five continents and more than a dozen countries...students of Eliot are left with a broader, more nuanced understanding of his work and its significance.'
Reviewed in Routledge ABES