Immagine dell'autore.

Duncan Wu

Autore di Romanticism: An Anthology

26 opere 708 membri 4 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Duncan Wu is Professor of English at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. He is the editor of Romanticism: An Anthology, 4th edition (Wiley Blackwell, 2012), and the author of books about Romanticism Wordsworth, and Hazlitt.

Opere di Duncan Wu

Romanticism: An Anthology (1994) 415 copie
A Companion to Romanticism (1997) — A cura di — 49 copie
Romantic Women Poets: An Anthology (1997) — A cura di — 18 copie
Victorian Poetry (Blackwell Essential Literature) (2002) — A cura di — 18 copie
Romantic Poetry (Blackwell Essential Literature) (2002) — A cura di — 12 copie
The Silence at the Song's End (2007) — A cura di — 11 copie
The Selected Writings of William Hazlitt [9 vols.] (1998) — A cura di — 5 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Recensioni

Note: I received a digital review copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley.
 
Segnalato
fernandie | Sep 15, 2022 |
On January 22, I received an electronic review copy of Poetry of Witness from W.W. Norton. Like all of the Norton anthologies this book is huge, so I haven’t begun to work my way completely through it, but I am already at a point where I feel that, even if I used every superlative in my writer’s armamentarium, I wouldn’t be doing this collection justice.

Poetry of Witness, which Forché also calls literature of that-which-happened, has a long history, though I find it less often than I’d like in English-language poetry, which seems more preoccupied with relating the complexity of individual emotion—whether joyful of mournful. Forché’s forward, “Reading the Living Archives: The Witness of Literary Lives,” attempts to forge a definition of poetry of witness that captures its meaning for author, reader, and society alike, concluding

"In the poetry of witness, the poems make present to us the experience, rather than a symbolic representation. When we read the poem as witness, we are marked by it and become ourselves witnesses to what it has made present before us. Language incises the page, wounding it with testimonial presence, and the reader is marked by encounter with that presence. Witness begets witness. The text we read becomes a living archive."

Forché reminds us that this living archive is not just figurative, but literal: Anna Akhmatova burned many of her poems after friends had memorized them, keeping them present when their physical presence would have been a very real threat to her life.

Poetry of witness emerges from, not after, experience, since it testifies to experiences that cannot be left behind, cannot become after. Forché argues that the language of poetry of witness is a damaged—and therefore transformed—language. The body of thought, like the body itself can be broken, (partially) rebuilt, mended:

"The witness who writes out of extremity writes his or her wound, as if such writing were making an incision. Consciousness itself is cut open. At the site of the wound, language breaks, becomes tentative, interrogational, kaleidoscopic. The form of this language bears the trance of extremity, and may be composed of fragments: questions, aphorisms, broken passages of lyric prose or poetry, quotations, dialogue, brief and lucid passages that may or may not resemble what previously had been written."

This volume, which is arranged chronologically, is a companion to Forché’s 1993 anthology, Against Forgetting (also published by Norton), which focuses on 20th Century poetry of witness. Poetry of Witness, with its broader focus, offers a powerful lineage of refusal, of questioning, on individuals destroyed upon the altars of states. These poems are part of the flow of literary witness across the last five hundred years of our history: long, damaged, glistening strands, like ropes, like rivers, like the twist of dna. By testifying to the worst in us, they preserve not only horror, but the hope of something better.

I don’t have now, and don’t know if I ever will have, words to capture the fierce, essential nature of this collection. I do know I will read and reread it—and, I hope, use it as a spur to thought, word, and action.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Sarah-Hope | Jan 23, 2014 |
Amazon: Duncan Wu is Professor of English Literature at the University of Glasgow.
Making Plays explores great drama of the last two decades through the eyes of those who write it and those who direct it. It is at once a masterclass on theatrical technique and a unique insight into the ways in which great dramatists of our time have reacted to a rapidly changing world. Duncan Wu talks to A Bennett, H Brenton, D Edgar, M Frayn, D Hare, M Attenborough, M Blakemore, R Eyre, N Hytner, M Stafford-Clark… (altro)
 
Segnalato
mmckay | May 16, 2006 |
Romanticism: An Anthology (Blackwell Anthologies) (2005)
 
Segnalato
arosoff | Jul 10, 2021 |

Liste

Premi e riconoscimenti

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Autori correlati

Edward Herbert Contributor
Sir John Harington Contributor
John Harington Contributor
Ivor Gurney Contributor
James Graham Contributor
Philip Freneau Contributor
Eliza Lee Follen Contributor
Robert Emmet Contributor
Elizabeth I Contributor
John Cornford Contributor
Abraham Cowley Contributor
Henry Howard Contributor
Thomas Cooper Contributor
Lydia Maria Child Contributor
Samuel Bamford Contributor
Anne Askew Contributor
Francis Scott Key Contributor
Lucy Hutchinson Contributor
Henry Dumas Contributor
Hannah More Contributor
Roger L'Estrange Contributor
Samuel Menashe Contributor
William Drennan Contributor
John Marjoribanks Contributor
Thomas Seymour Contributor
Joseph Mather Contributor
Chidiock Tichborne Contributor
Thomas Fairfax Contributor
Charlotte Smith Contributor
Francis Quarles Contributor
Katherine Philips Contributor
Walter Ralegh Contributor
Henry Wotton Contributor
Gerrard Winstanley Contributor
Robert Southwell Contributor
Matthew Prior Contributor
John Suckling Contributor
Isaac Rosenberg Contributor
Ann Yearsley Contributor
George Wither Contributor
Richard Lovelace Contributor
Edmund Waller Contributor
John McCrae Contributor
Patrick Pearse Contributor
John Thelwall Contributor
William Meredith Contributor
Karl Shapiro Contributor
Phillis Wheatley Contributor
W. B. Yeats Contributor
Aphra Behn Contributor
Ben Jonson Contributor
Edmund Spenser Contributor
Frederick Douglass Contributor
Thomas More Contributor
William Wordsworth Contributor
John Keats Contributor
Robert Creeley Contributor
John Donne Contributor
Ambrose Bierce Contributor
Stephen Crane Contributor
William Blake Contributor
Emily Dickinson Contributor
John Bunyan Contributor
Walt Whitman Contributor
John Milton Contributor
Daniel Defoe Contributor
Rudyard Kipling Contributor
D. H. Lawrence Contributor
Herman Melville Contributor
William Stafford Contributor
John Dryden Contributor
Oscar Wilde Contributor
Edmund Blunden Contributor
Thomas Wyatt Contributor
Keith Douglas Contributor
Leigh Hunt Contributor
Arthur Hugh Clough Contributor
John Wilmot Contributor
Henry Vaughan Contributor
Basil Bunting Contributor
Margaret Cavendish Contributor
Agha Shahid Ali Contributor
W. D. Snodgrass Contributor
James Orr Contributor
Hugh MacDiarmid Contributor
Thom Gunn Contributor
Anne Bradstreet Contributor
Claude McKay Contributor
Robert Herrick Contributor
John Clare Contributor
John Newton Contributor
Ernest Jones Contributor
Edith Sitwell Contributor
David Jones Contributor
Olaudah Equiano Contributor
Andrew Marvell Contributor
Hayden Carruth Contributor
Archibald MacLeish Contributor

Statistiche

Opere
26
Utenti
708
Popolarità
#35,797
Voto
½ 3.6
Recensioni
4
ISBN
65

Grafici & Tabelle