Lyric and Dramatic Poetry, 1946-82

Aime Cesaire, Clayton Eshleman (Translator), Annette Smith (Translator), A. James Arnold (Introduction by)

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Author
Aime Cesaire, Clayton Eshleman (Translator), Annette Smith (Translator), A. James Arnold (Introduction by)
Publish Date
1990-09-03
Book Type
Paperback
Publisher Name
University of Virginia Press
Number of Pages
235
ISBN-10
081391244X
ISBN-13
9780813912448
SKU
9780813912448

Description

Aime Cesaire has been described by the Times Literary Supplement as likely to "figure alongside the Eliot-Pound-Yeats triumvirate that has dominated official poetic culture for more than fifty years." He was a cofounder and exponent of the concept of negritude and is a major spiritual, political, and literary figure.Cesaire has been read politically as a poet of revolutionary zeal since the 1960s. This collection, the only one in existence in any language to give a truly comprehensive retrospective of Cesaire's poetic production, demonstrates the narrowness of earlier readings that grew out of the climate of Black Power influenced by the essays of Frantz Fanon, another Martinican, who was largely responsible for the ambient view of Csaire a generation ago. It is the first collection to translate And the Dogs Were Silent and i, laminaria. Lyric and Dramatic Poetry, 1946-82 goes beyond anything else in print (in French or in English) in that it locates the issues of Cesaire's struggle with an emerging postmodern vision. It will place Cesaire in a strategic position in the current debate in the U.S. over emergent literature and will show him to be a major figure in the conflict between tradition and contemporary cultural identity.