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Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
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Chaos, Crossing (Paperback)
Olivia Elias; Translated by Kareem James Abu-Zeid; Foreword by Najwan Darwish
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R450
Discovery Miles 4 500
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This book examines the work of two major poets who wrote in the
second half of the twentieth century, Yves Bonnefoy of France and
the Syrian-born Adonis (born Ali Ahmed Said). In conducting close
readings of key moments from their respective poetry, the author
illustrates how both of these writers, in their own unique ways,
construct poetry as a form of spiritual practice, that is, as a way
of transforming both the poet's and the implied reader's
ontological, perceptual and creative relationships with their
internal and external worlds.
'The greatest living poet of the Arab world' Guardian Cloud,
mirror, stone, thunder, eyelid, desert, sea. Through a dead or
dying land, Mihyar walks: a figure of heroic individualism and
dissent, part-Orpheus, part-Zarathustra. Where he goes, the austere
building-blocks of his world become the expressions of passionate
emotion, of visionary exaltation and despairing melancholy. The
traditions of the Ancient Greeks, the Bible and the Quran flow
about and through him. Written in the cosmopolitan Beirut of the
early 1960s, Adonis's Songs of Mihyar the Damascene did for Arabic
poetry what The Waste Land did for English. These are poems against
authoritarianism and dogma, in which a new Noah would abandon his
ark to dive with the condemned, and in which surrealism and Sufi
mysticism meet and intertwine. The result is a masterpiece of world
literature. Translated by Kareem James Abu Zeid and Ivan Eubanks
'The most eloquent spokesman and explorer of Arabic modernity'
Edward Said
The Iraqi Nights is the third collection by the acclaimed Iraqi
poet Dunya Mikhail. Taking The One Thousand and One Nights as her
central theme, Mikhail personifies the role of Scheherazade the
storyteller, saving herself through her tales. The nights are
endless, seemingly as dark as war in this haunting collection,
seemingly as endless as war. Yet the poet cannot stop dreaming of a
future beyond the violence of a place where "every moment /
something ordinary / will happen under the sun." Unlike
Scheherazade, however, Mikhail is writing, not to escape death, but
to summon the strength to endure. Inhabiting the emotive spaces
between Iraq and the U.S., Mikhail infuses those harsh realms with
a deep poetic intimacy. The author's vivid illustrations - inspired
by Sumerian tablets - are threaded throughout this powerful book.
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The Book of Trivialities
Majed Mujed; Translated by Kareem James Abu-Zeid
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R229
Discovery Miles 2 290
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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