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Conversations with W. S. Merwin is the first collection of
interviews with former United States Poet Laureate W. S. Merwin (b.
1927). Spanning almost six decades of conversations, the collection
touches on such topics as Merwin's early influences (Robert Graves
and Ezra Pound), his location within the twin poles of Walt Whitman
and Henry David Thoreau, his extraordinary work as a translator, as
well as his decades-long interest in environmental conservation.
Anticipating the current sustainability movement and the debates
surrounding major and minor literatures, Merwin was, and still is,
a visionary. At age eighty-eight, he is among the most
distinguished poets, translators, and thinkers in the United
States. A major link between the period of literary modernism and
its contemporary extensions, Merwin has been a force in American
letters for many decades, and his translations from the Spanish,
French, Italian, Japanese, and other languages, have earned him
unanimous praise and admiration. Merwin also wrote at the forefront
of literature's environmental advocacy and early on articulated
concerns about ecology and sustainability. Now, for the first time,
Conversations with W. S. Merwin offers insight into the various
dimensions of Merwin's thought by treating his interviews as a
self-standing category in his oeuvre. More than casual narratives
that interpret the occasional poem or relay an occasional
experience, they afford literary and cultural historians a view
into the larger through-lines of Merwin's thinking.
This highly readable edited collection focuses on the work of
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Annie Proulx. Each contributor to
this volume explores a different facet of Proulx's striking
attention to geography, place, landscape, regional environments,
and local economies in her writing. Covering all of her novels and
short story collections, scholars from the United States, Canada,
and abroad engage in critical analyses of Proulx's new regionalism,
use of geographical settings, and themes of displacement and
immigration. Taken together, these essays demonstrate Annie
Proulx's contribution to new regionalist understandings of place on
local, national, and global scales. Readers will come away with a
better understanding of Proulx's particular landscapes_particularly
those of Wyoming, New England, Texas, and Newfoundland_and the
issues surrounding the significance of these regions in
contemporary American culture and literature.
This highly readable edited collection focuses on the work of
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Annie Proulx. Each contributor to
this volume explores a different facet of Proulx's striking
attention to geography, place, landscape, regional environments,
and local economies in her writing. Covering all of her novels and
short story collections, scholars from the United States, Canada,
and abroad engage in critical analyses of Proulx's new regionalism,
use of geographical settings, and themes of displacement and
immigration. Taken together, these essays demonstrate Annie
Proulx's contribution to new regionalist understandings of place on
local, national, and global scales. Readers will come away with a
better understanding of Proulx's particular landscapes particularly
those of Wyoming, New England, Texas, and Newfoundland and the
issues surrounding the significance of these regions in
contemporary American culture and literature."
Conversations with W. S. Merwin is the first collection of
interviews with former United States Poet Laureate W. S. Merwin (b.
1927). Spanning almost six decades of conversations, the collection
touches on such topics as Merwin's early influences (Robert Graves
and Ezra Pound), his location within the twin poles of Walt Whitman
and Henry David Thoreau, and his extraordinary work as a
translator, as well as his decades-long interest in environmental
conservation. Anticipating the current sustainability movement and
the debates surrounding major and minor literatures, Merwin was,
and still is, a visionary. At age eighty-eight, he is among the
most distinguished poets, translators, and thinkers in the United
States. A major link between the period of literary modernism and
its contemporary extensions, Merwin has been a force in American
letters for many decades, and his translations from the Spanish,
French, Italian, Japanese, and other languages have earned him
unanimous praise and admiration. Merwin also wrote at the forefront
of literature's environmental advocacy and early on articulated
concerns about ecology and sustainability. Conversations with W. S.
Merwin offers insight into the various dimensions of Merwin's
thought by treating his interviews as a self-standing category in
his oeuvre. More than casual narratives that interpret the
occasional poem or relay an occasional experience, they afford
literary and cultural historians a view into the larger
throughlines of Merwin's thinking.
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