Criar um Site Grátis Fantástico
Ebook Aleksandr Kushner - Apollo in the Grass : Selected Poems in TXT, EPUB

9780374535483
English

0374535485
"To renew the wish to live, I remember a waterfall.""""It clutches at stones, hangs like a wild grapevine""""In a blind homeland of stone letters, stone books--""""Here's the one who takes life in totally, perishing every instant.""""--from "The Waterfall"" For the Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky, the work of Aleksandr Kushner was indispensable. "Kushner is one of the best Russian lyric poets of the twentieth century, and his name is destined to rank with those close to the heart of everyone whose mother tongue is Russian." Kushner's poems are simultaneously deeply traditional in their mastery of form--as well as in their influences, which trace back through the "Silver Age" poets to the rootstock of the Russian lyric--and utterly contemporary in their idiom and way of speaking, a contrast that's often wryly provocative and laced with subtle political protest. The poems in "Apollo in the Grass," mostly written after the fall of the Soviet Union speak from a place where the the mythic and the historic coexist with the everyday, where Odysseus is one of us, and the "stern voice" of history can transform any public square into a harrowing schoolroom. But these lyrical poems are also pieces of exquisite chamber music, songs where poetry dazzles but "greatness is . . . sooner scaled to the heart / Than to anything very enormous.", A selection of poems from one of Russia's greatest contemporary poets To renew the wish to live, I remember a waterfall. It clutches at stones, hangs like a wild grapevine In a blind homeland of stone letters, stone books Here's the one who takes life in totally, perishing every instant. from "The Waterfall" For the Nobel laureate Joseph Brodksy, the work of Aleksandr Kushner was indispensable. "Kushner is one of the best Russian lyric poets of the twentieth century, and his name is destined to rank with those close to the heart of everyone whose mother tongue is Russian. This name is destined to outlive most of us and our children and grandchildren, as well as its bearer himself . . . Poetry is essentially the soul's search for its release in language, and the work of Aleksandr Kushner is a case where the soul has obtained that release." Kushner's poems are simultaneously deeply traditional in their mastery of formas well as in their influences, which can be traced through Akhmatova back to Pushkinand wryly provocative in their subtle political protests and doubts about the survival of poetry. The poems in Apollo in the Grass, written after the fall of the Soviet Union as Russia entered the age of Putin, are a place where the mythical and the everyday coexist, where ancient Greece and St. Petersburg are neighbors, and the Fall of Icarus and the Siege of Leningrad are contemporaneous. Kushner's Russia, a place that's "brazen, despotic, beggarly, harrowing," is a land of "creatures made of snow and bruises." But these lyrical poems are also pieces of exquisite chamber music, songs where poetry dazzles but "greatness is not sooner scaled to the heart / Than to anything very enormous.", For the Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky, the poems of Aleksandr Kushner were essential: "Kushner is one of the best Russian lyric poets of the twentieth century, and his name is destined to rank with those close to the heart of everyone whose mother tongue is Russian.""Apollo in the Grass" is the first collection in English translation of Kushner's post-Soviet poems, and also includes certain earlier ones that could not be published during the Soviet era. Kushner speaks to us from a place where the mythic and the historic coexist with the everyday, where Odysseus is one of us, and the "stern voice" of history can transform any public square into a harrowing schoolroom. This layering of times and events is also embodied in Kushner's distinctive poetic voice. Echoes of earlier Russian poets and styles enrich and complicate an idiom that is utterly natural and contemporary. Now, as in the Soviet era, Kushner's work is especially cherished for its exemplary stoic integrity. But these lyrical poems are also pieces of exquisite chamber music, songs where poetry dazzles but "greatness is . . . sooner scaled to the heart / Than to anything very enormous.", The more softly the word is pronounced The more ardent, the more miraculous. The less it dreams of becoming a song That much nearer it draws to music. -from "Apollo in the Grass" For the Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky, the poems of Aleksandr Kushner were essential: "Kushner is one of the best Russian lyric poets of the twentieth century, and his name is destined to rank with those close to the heart of everyone whose mother tongue is Russian." Apollo in the Grass is the first collection in English translation of Kushner's post-Soviet poems, and also includes certain earlier ones that could not be published during the Soviet era. Kushner speaks to us from a place where the mythic and the historic coexist with the everyday, where Odysseus is one of us, and the "stern voice" of history can transform any public square into a harrowing schoolroom. This layering of times and events is also embodied in Kushner's distinctive poetic voice. Echoes of earlier Russian poets and styles enrich and complicate an idiom that is utterly natural and contemporary. Now, as in the Soviet era, Kushner's work is especially cherished for its exemplary stoic integrity. But these lyrical poems are also pieces of exquisite chamber music, songs where poetry dazzles but "greatness is . . . sooner scaled to the heart / Than to anything very enormous.", To renew the wish to live, I remember a waterfall. It clutches at stones, hangs like a wild grapevine In a blind homeland of stone letters, stone books-- Here's the one who takes life in totally, perishing every instant. --from "The Waterfall" For the Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky, the work of Aleksandr Kushner was indispensable. "Kushner is one of the best Russian lyric poets of the twentieth century, and his name is destined to rank with those close to the heart of everyone whose mother tongue is Russian." Kushner's poems are simultaneously deeply traditional in their mastery of form--as well as in their influences, which trace back through the "Silver Age" poets to the rootstock of the Russian lyric--and utterly contemporary in their idiom and way of speaking, a contrast that's often wryly provocative and laced with subtle political protest. The poems in Apollo in the Grass , mostly written after the fall of the Soviet Union speak from a place where the the mythic and the historic coexist with the everyday, where Odysseus is one of us, and the "stern voice" of history can transform any public square into a harrowing schoolroom. But these lyrical poems are also pieces of exquisite chamber music, songs where poetry dazzles but "greatness is . . . sooner scaled to the heart / Than to anything very enormous."

Aleksandr Kushner - Apollo in the Grass : Selected Poems read online book PDF, FB2

As artists, Joseph, Franz and Ferdinand Bauer were independently successful: Joseph as court painter to the Prince of Lichtenstein; Franz (later Francis) was employed atKew Gardens as the "Botanick Painter to His Majesty"; andFerdinand's seminal collection of 1500 paintings created fromsketches he made traveling in and around Australia is thefirst detailed account of the natural history of that continent.Drawing extensively on the holdings of the Natural HistoryMuseum in London, this illustrated history of the Bauers andtheir work unfolds chronologically, starting with the brothers'formative years in Feldsberg, Austria, where they producedmore than two thousand drawings of plant specimens under theguidance of the local abbot.Because the linothorax was made of cloth, no examples of it have survived.It s more than just a personal relationship with God or a source of moral teaching.A favorite with actors for its powerful, poignant, and highly original monologues and scenes, Yoo-Hoo and Hank Williams is a dark, absurdist delight.A design history of the car, this book shows how and why the automobile has evolved into both an object of unparalleled desire and the problem child of the modern world.This work helped transform the perception of the Robin Hood tradition, encouraging its serious study.Wilson, and many others!, Seventeen hard science fiction tales by today's top authors Hard science fiction is the literature of change, rigorously examining the impact--both beneficial and dangerous--of science and technology on humanity, the future, and the cosmos.Although modern theologians often fail to reflect robustly on the relationship between Christology and anthropology, it has not necessarily been the case throughout church history.Achieving Democracy critiques the history of the last 30 years of neoliberal government in the United States, and enables an understanding of the dynamic and changing nature of contemporary government and the future of the regulatory state.His rhapsodic travel stories place him in the league of fellow travelers who are also masterful writers, such as Pico Iyer, Jack Kerouac, Jan Morris, and Beryl Markham.", Phil Cousineau has been a traveling man all his life.Along the way, celebrities such as Marlon Brando and Dick Gregory come to the tribes' defense, and a judge makes an historic ruling that leaves one side elated and the other embittered.Section Two celebrates the role of friendship within his psychoanalytic circle, and Section Three highlights his leadership role in the development of creative structures: the journal Psychoanalytic Inquiry; The Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis (ICP&P) and its training programs; and the ongoing Creativity Seminar.The Three Battles of Sand Creek will take its place as the definitive account of this previously misunderstood, and tragic, event.Rights Remembered is a remarkable historical narrative and autobiography written by esteemed Lummi elder and culture bearer Pauline R.