Celan Studies
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Author |
: Peter Szondi |
Publisher |
: Stanford University Press |
Total Pages |
: 156 |
Release |
: 2003 |
ISBN-10 |
: 0804744025 |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780804744027 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (25 Downloads) |
Synopsis Celan Studies by : Peter Szondi
Peter Szondi's Celan Studies marked the beginning of critical work on Paul Celan, the most important German poet of the second half of the twentieth century. The book's three studies each concentrate on a different Celan poem. "The Poetry of Constancy: Paul Celan's Translation of Shakespeare's Sonnet 105" investigates a historical turn from a poetry that claims to present its object to a poetry that only promises to do so. "Reading 'Engführung'" follows the movement of poetic language into territory undisclosed to epistemic reason. "Eden" addresses "Du liegst," a poem on the murder of Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht; Szondi actually was with Celan when the poem was written. It analyzes the relation between the historical facts to which a poem refers and its composition. The book contains, as appendixes, Szondi's notes for three more projected studies of Celan poems, left unwritten at the time of his death in 1971.
Author |
: Peter Szondi |
Publisher |
: |
Total Pages |
: 160 |
Release |
: 2003 |
ISBN-10 |
: UOM:39015056824819 |
ISBN-13 |
: |
Rating |
: 4/5 (19 Downloads) |
Synopsis Celan Studies by : Peter Szondi
Peter Szondi’s Celan Studies marked the beginning of critical work on Paul Celan, the most important German poet of the second half of the twentieth century. The book’s three studies each concentrate on a different Celan poem. “The Poetry of Constancy: Paul Celan’s Translation of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 105” investigates a historical turn from a poetry that claims to present its object to a poetry that only promises to do so. “Reading ‘Engf�hrung’” follows the movement of poetic language into territory undisclosed to epistemic reason. “Eden” addresses “Du liegst,” a poem on the murder of Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht; Szondi actually was with Celan when the poem was written. It analyzes the relation between the historical facts to which a poem refers and its composition. The book contains, as appendixes, Szondi’s notes for three more projected studies of Celan poems, left unwritten at the time of his death in 1971.
Author |
: Hugo Bekker |
Publisher |
: Rodopi |
Total Pages |
: 269 |
Release |
: 2008 |
ISBN-10 |
: 9789042023826 |
ISBN-13 |
: 9042023821 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (26 Downloads) |
Synopsis Paul Celan by : Hugo Bekker
Paul Celan: Studies in His Early Poetry scrutinizes the influences detectable in the poems written during 1938-48. Among German writers, Büchner, Goethe, Gottfried von Strassburg, Gryphius, Mörike, the poet of the Nibelungenlied, Novalis, Rilke, and Trakl all provided motifs that, often repeated, make for a dense network inviting attention to the self-referential and self-revealing patterns in Celan's early work. In addition, there are many poems that contain motifs gleaned from Greek mythology and/or biblical data. These references, on occasion quite clear, more often so obscure as to be hazy allusions, yield the view that during his first decade of poetic activities Celan becomes increasingly recondite. When these references or allusions stand side-by-side in a given poem, they acquire a surrealistic tint and threaten to withhold clear meaning. Ambiguities, deliberately cultivated in the earliest poems, begin to boomerang and read like so many preludes to the struggles with language evident in the poetry of Celan's maturity. It is a certainty that Celan reacted quickly, if not immediately, to the events befalling the scenes of his early years (Czernowitz and the forced-labor camp). This phenomenon mandates the view of his poems as so many pieces of autobiography. It thus is inevitable that as early as 1940 he wrote against the backdrop of war, and soon thereafter in the shadow of the Holocaust that was destined to brand his mind forever. This volume is meant for anyone interested in Celan, close reading of modern poetry in general, comparative literature, motif studies, poetic reactions to Holocaust events, or even in a Jew's concept regarding the role of the deity in the destruction of those for whom the poet speaks.
Author |
: John Felstiner |
Publisher |
: Yale University Press |
Total Pages |
: 374 |
Release |
: 2001-01-01 |
ISBN-10 |
: 0300089228 |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780300089226 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (28 Downloads) |
Synopsis Paul Celan by : John Felstiner
Paul Celan, Europe's most compelling postwar poet, was a German-speaking, East European Jew. His writing exposes and illumines the wounds that Nazi destructiveness left on language. John Felstiner's sensitive and accessible book is the first critical biography of Celan in any language. It offers new translations of well-known and little-known poems--including a chapter on Celan's famous "Deathfugue"--plus his speeches, prose fiction, and letters. The book also presents hitherto unpublished photos of the poet and his circle. Drawing on interviews with Celan's family and friends and his personal library in Normandy and Paris, as well as voluminous German commentary, Felstiner tells the poet's gripping story: his birth in 1920 in Romania, the overnight loss of his parents in a Nazi deportation, his experience of forced labor and Soviet occupation during the war, and then his difficult exile in Paris. The life's work of Paul Celan emerges through readings of his poems within their personal and historical matrix. At the same time, Felstiner finds fresh insights by opening up the very process of translating Celan's poems. To present this poetry and the strain of Jewishness it displays, Felstiner uncovers Celan's sources in the Bible and Judaic mysticism, his affinities with Kafka, Heine, Hölderlin, Rilke, and Nelly Sachs, his fascination with Heidegger and Buber, his piercing translations of Shakespeare, Dickinson, Mandelshtam, Apollinaire. First and last, Felstiner explores the achievement of a poet surviving in his mother tongue, the German language that had passed, Celan said, "through the thousand darknesses of deathbringing speech."
Author |
: Eric Kligerman |
Publisher |
: Walter de Gruyter |
Total Pages |
: 345 |
Release |
: 2012-02-13 |
ISBN-10 |
: 9783110913934 |
ISBN-13 |
: 3110913933 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (34 Downloads) |
Synopsis Sites of the Uncanny by : Eric Kligerman
Sites of the Uncanny: Paul Celan, Specularity and the Visual Arts is the first book-length study that examines Celan’s impact on visual culture. Exploring poetry’s relation to film, painting and architecture, this study tracks the transformation of Celan in postwar German culture and shows the extent to which his poetics accompany the country’s memory politics after the Holocaust. The book posits a new theoretical model of the Holocaustal uncanny – evolving out of a crossing between Celan, Freud, Heidegger and Levinas – that provides a map for entering other modes of Holocaust representations. After probing Celan’s critique of the uncanny in Heidegger, this study shifts to the translation of Celan’s uncanny poetics in Resnais’ film Night and Fog, Kiefer’s art and Libeskind’s architecture.
Author |
: Rochelle Tobias |
Publisher |
: JHU Press |
Total Pages |
: 180 |
Release |
: 2006-06-30 |
ISBN-10 |
: 0801882907 |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780801882906 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (07 Downloads) |
Synopsis The Discourse of Nature in the Poetry of Paul Celan by : Rochelle Tobias
Publisher Description
Author |
: Michael Eskin |
Publisher |
: Stanford University Press |
Total Pages |
: 253 |
Release |
: 2008-02-26 |
ISBN-10 |
: 9780804786812 |
ISBN-13 |
: 080478681X |
Rating |
: 4/5 (12 Downloads) |
Synopsis Poetic Affairs by : Michael Eskin
Poetic Affairs deals with the complex and fascinating interface between literature and life through the prism of the lives and works of three outstanding poets: the German-Jewish poet and Holocaust survivor, Paul Celan (1920–1970); the Leningrad native, U.S. poet laureate, and Nobel Prize winner, Joseph Brodsky (1940–1996); and Germany's premier contemporary poet, Durs Grünbein (born 1962). Focusing on their poetic dialogues with such interlocutors as Shakespeare, Seneca, and Byron, respectively—veritable love affairs unfolding in and through poetry—Eskin offers unprecedented readings of Celan's, Brodsky's, and Grünbein's lives and works and discloses the ways in which poetry articulates and remains faithful to the manifold "truths"—historical, political, poetic, erotic—determining human existence.
Author |
: Ulrich Baer |
Publisher |
: Stanford University Press |
Total Pages |
: 364 |
Release |
: 2000 |
ISBN-10 |
: 0804739277 |
ISBN-13 |
: 9780804739276 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (77 Downloads) |
Synopsis Remnants of Song by : Ulrich Baer
In a bold reassessment, this book analyzes the works of Baudelaire and Celan, two poets who frame our sense of modern poetry and define the beginning and end of modernity itself. It relates Baudelaire s exploration of the trauma of the minute personal shocks of everyday existence to Celan s engagement with the catastrophic magnitude of the Holocaust."
Author |
: Jacques Derrida |
Publisher |
: Fordham Univ Press |
Total Pages |
: 223 |
Release |
: 2005 |
ISBN-10 |
: 9780823224371 |
ISBN-13 |
: 0823224376 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (71 Downloads) |
Synopsis Sovereignties in Question by : Jacques Derrida
This book brings together five encounters. They include the date or signature and its singularity; the notion of the trace; structures of futurity and the "to come"; language and questions of translation; such speech acts as testimony and promising; the possibility of the impossible; and the poem as addressed and destined beyond knowledge.
Author |
: Marc Redfield |
Publisher |
: Fordham University Press |
Total Pages |
: 115 |
Release |
: 2020-12-01 |
ISBN-10 |
: 9780823289080 |
ISBN-13 |
: 0823289087 |
Rating |
: 4/5 (80 Downloads) |
Synopsis Shibboleth by : Marc Redfield
Working from the Bible to contemporary art, Shibboleth surveys the linguistic performances behind the politics of border crossings and the policing of identities. In the Book of Judges, the Gileadites use the word shibboleth to target and kill members of a closely related tribe, the Ephraimites, who cannot pronounce the initial shin phoneme. In modern European languages, shibboleth has come to mean a hard-to-falsify sign that winnows identities and establishes and confirms borders. It has also acquired the ancillary meanings of slogan or cliché. The semantic field of shibboleth thus seems keyed to the waning of the logos in an era of technical reproducibility—to the proliferation of technologies and practices of encryption, decryption, exclusion and inclusion that saturate modern life. The various phenomena we sum up as neoliberalism and globalization are unimaginable in the absence of shibboleth-technologies. In the context of an unending refugee crisis and a general displacement, monitoring and quarantining of populations within a global regime of technics, Paul Celan’s subtle yet fierce reorientation of shibboleth merits scrupulous reading. This book interprets the episode in Judges together with Celan’s poems and Jacques Derrida’s reading of them, as well as passages from William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom! and Doris Salcedo’s 2007 installation Shibboleth at the Tate Modern. Redfield pursues the track of shibboleth: a word to which no language can properly lay claim—a word that is both less and more than a word, that signifies both the epitome and the ruin of border control technology, and that thus, despite its violent role in the Biblical story, offers a locus of poetico-political affirmation.