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Ka (Paperback)
Roberto Calasso
1
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R2,643
Discovery Miles 26 430
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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'To read Ka is to experience a giddy invasion of stories -
brilliant, enigmatic, troubling, outrageous, erotic, beautiful' The
New York Times 'Who?' - or 'ka' - is the question that runs through
Roberto Calasso's retelling of the stories of the minds and gods of
India; the primordial question that continues to haunt human
existence. From the Rigveda to the Upanishads, the Mahabharata to
the life of Buddha, this book delves into the corpus of classical
Sanskrit literature to re-imagine the ancient Indian myths and how
they resonate through space and time. 'The very best book about
Hindu mythology that anyone has ever written' Wendy Doniger
'Dazzling, complex, utterly original ... Ka is his masterpiece'
Sunday Times
'It will be read and re-read not as a treatise but as a story: one
of the most extraordinary that has ever been written of the origins
of Western self-consciousness' Simon Schama The marriage of Cadmus
and Harmony was the last time the gods of Olympus feasted alongside
mortals. What happened in the distant ages preceding it, and in the
generations that followed, form the timeless tales of ancient Greek
mythology. In this masterful retelling of the myths we think we
know, Roberto Calasso illuminates the deepest questions of our
existence. 'The kind of book one comes across only once or twice in
one's lifetime' Joseph Brodsky 'A perfect work like no other' Gore
Vidal
An immersive and mesmerizing narrative that reimagines the
Mesopotamian myth of the Great Flood A long time ago, the gods grew
tired of humans and decided to send a flood to destroy them. But
Ea, the god of fresh underground water, didn't agree. He advised
one of his devotees, Utnapishtim, to build a quadrangular boat to
house humans and animals, and saved these living creatures from the
Flood. Rather than punish Utnapishtim for his disobedience, Enlil,
King of the gods, granted the mortal eternal life and banished him
to the island of Dilmun. Thousands of years later, when Sinbad the
Sailor is shipwrecked and arrives on that very same island, the two
begin a conversation about courage, loss, salvation and sacrifice.
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Ardor (Paperback)
Roberto Calasso
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R391
R319
Discovery Miles 3 190
Save R72 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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In this revelatory volume, Roberto Calasso, whom the Paris Review
has called 'a literary institution', explores the ancient texts
known as the Vedas. Little is known about the Vedic people who
lived more than three thousand years ago in northern India: they
left behind almost no objects, images, ruins. Only a 'Parthenon of
words' remains: verses and formulations suggesting a daring
understanding of life. 'If the Vedic people had been asked why they
did not build cities,' writes Calasso, 'they could have replied: we
did not seek power, but rapture.' This is the ardor of the Vedic
world, a burning intensity that is always present, both in the mind
and in the cosmos. With his signature erudition and profound sense
of the past, Calasso explores the enigmatic web of ritual and myth
that define the Vedas. Often at odds with modern thought, he shows
how these texts illuminate the nature of consciousness more than
neuroscientists have been able to offer us up to now.
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The Ruin of Kasch (Paperback)
Roberto Calasso; Translated by Richard Dixon
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R561
R476
Discovery Miles 4 760
Save R85 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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'A poetic, erudite exploration of history and myth' Financial Times
An unforgettable journey through centuries and across cultures to
the pivotal moment in evolution - when humans did something that no
species had yet tried - when we became the hunter and no longer the
prey. Informed by Greek and Egyptian myth, the stories of poets,
shamans and gods, Roberto Calasso's expansive exploration of our
relationship to animals and sacrifice, encourages us to reframe our
understanding of our place in history, and in the world. 'Calasso
has created a much discussed original genre for these books ... a
dense pastiche of myth, biography, criticism, philosophy, history
and minutiae ... woven together by Calasso's unflagging vision' The
New Yorker
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Tiepolo Pink (Paperback)
Roberto Calasso; Translated by Alastair McEwen
1
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R460
R378
Discovery Miles 3 780
Save R82 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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'Tiepolo: the last breath of happiness in Europe' The
eighteenth-century Venetian painter Giambattista Tiepolo spent his
life creating frescoes that are among the glories of Western art,
yet he remains shrouded in mystery. Who was he? And what was the
significance of the dark, bizarre etchings depicting sacrifice and
magic, which he created alongside his heavenly works? Roberto
Calasso explores Tiepolo as the last artist of the ancien regime
and at the same time the first example of the "painter of modern
life" evoked by Baudelaire. He was the incarnation of that peculiar
Italian virtue sprezzatura: the art of not seeming artful.
Translated by Alastair McEwen 'A brilliant, eccentric, provocative
. . . and thoroughly splendid celebration of a great painter' John
Banville, The New Republic 'Calasso is a myth-maker ... a book that
treats paintings as a kind of sorcery' Peter Conrad, Observer
Roberto Calasso is one of the most original and acclaimed of
writers on literature, art, culture and mythology. In Baudelaire's
Folly, Calasso turns his attention to the poets and writers of
Paris in the nineteenth century who created what was later called
'the Modern.' His protagonist is Charles Baudelaire: poet of
nerves, art lover, pioneering critic, man about Paris, whose
groundbreaking works on modern culture described the ephemeral,
fleeting nature of life in the metropolis - and the artist's role
in capturing this - as no other writer had done. With Baudelaire's
critical intelligence as his inspiration, Calasso ranges through
his life and work, focusing on two painters - Ingres and Delacroix
- about whom Baudelaire wrote acutely, and then turns to Degas and
Manet, who followed in the tracks Baudelaire laid down in his great
essay The Painter of Modern Life. In a mosaic of stories, insights,
dreams, close readings of poems and commentaries on paintings,
Paris in Baudelaire's years comes to life. In the eighteenth
century, a 'folie' was a garden pavilion set aside for people of
leisure, a place of delight and fantasy. Here Calasso has created a
brilliant and dramatic 'Folie Baudelaire': a place where the reader
can encounter Baudelaire, his peers, his city, his extraordinary
likes and dislikes, and his world, finally discovering that it is
nothing less than the land of 'absolute literature'. Born in
Florence, Roberto Calasso lives in Milan, where he is publisher of
Adelphi. He is the author of Tiepolo Pink, The Ruin of Kasch, The
Marriage of Cadmus and Harmony, winner of the Prix Veillon and the
Prix du Meilleur Livre Etranger, Literature and the Gods, Ka and K.
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The Ruin of Kasch (Paperback)
Roberto Calasso; Translated by Richard Dixon
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R334
R274
Discovery Miles 2 740
Save R60 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A sparkling new translation of the classic work on violence and
revolution as seen through mythology and art The Ruin of Kasch
takes up two subjects: "the first is Talleyrand, and the second is
everything else," wrote Italo Calvino when the book first appeared
in 1983. Hailed as one of those rare books that persuade us to see
our entire civilization in a new light, its guide is the French
statesman Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, who knew the secrets of
the ancien regime and all that came after, and was able to adapt
the notion of "legitimacy" to the modern age. Roberto Calasso
follows him through a vast gallery of scenes set immediately before
and after the French Revolution, making occasional forays backward
and forward in time, from Vedic India to the porticoes of the
Palais-Royal and to the killing fields of Pol Pot, with appearances
by Goethe and Marie Antoinette, Napoleon and Marx, Walter Benjamin
and Chateaubriand. At the centre stands the story of the ruin of
Kasch, a legendary kingdom based on the ritual killing of the king
and emblematic of the ruin of ancient and modern regimes.
'Startling, puzzling, profound . . . a work charged with
intelligence and literary seduction' The New York Times 'Unique,
idiosyncratic and vaultingly ambitious... essential reading'
Independent 'A great fat jewel-box of a book, gleaming with obscure
treasures' John Banville
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K. (Paperback)
Roberto Calasso; Translated by Geoffrey Brock
1
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R385
R313
Discovery Miles 3 130
Save R72 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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What are Kafka's stories about? Are they dreams? Allegories?
Symbols? Things that happen every day? But where and when? In this
remarkable book, Roberto Calasso sets out not to dispel the mystery
but to let it be illuminated by its own light. With his unique
vision, imagination, and intellectual acumen, Calasso attempts to
enter the flow, the tortuous movement, the physiology of the
stories to discover what they are meant to signify and to delve
into the most basic question: Who is K.?
'Beautiful, intellectually thrilling . . . unlike anything else'
Telegraph Promise and separation. Grace and guilt. The chosen and
the damned. Roberto Calasso's captivating retelling of key stories
from the bible evokes the dramatic world of the Old Testament and
casts one of the founding texts of Western civilization in an
astonishing - and disquieting - new light. The Book of All Books is
the culmination of a lifetime's work and the tenth part of a series
that began with The Ruin of Kasch. 'Engaging . . . enlightening'
Financial Times 'Surprising . . . vivid' Spectator
"A giddy invasion of stories--brilliant, enigmatic, troubling, outrageous, erotic, beautiful." --The New York Times Book Review
"So brilliant that you can't look at it anymore--and you can't look at anything else. . . . No one will read it without reward." --The Boston Globe
With the same narrative fecundity and imaginative sympathy he brought to his acclaimed retelling of the Greek myths, Roberto Calasso plunges Western readers into the mind of ancient India. He begins with a mystery: Why is the most important god in the Rg Veda, the oldest of India's sacred texts, known by a secret name--"Ka," or Who? What ensues is not an explanation, but an unveiling. Here are the stories of the creation of mind and matter; of the origin of Death, of the first sexual union and the first parricide. We learn why Siva must carry his father's skull, why snakes have forked tongues, and why, as part of a certain sacrifice, the king's wife must copulate with a dead horse. A tour de force of scholarship and seduction, Ka is irresistible.
"Passage[s] of such ecstatic insight and cross-cultural synthesis--simply, of such beauty." --The New York Review of Books
"All is spectacle and delight, and tiny mirrors reflecting human foibles are set into the weave,turning this retelling into the stuff of literature." --The New Yorker
From the internationally acclaimed author of "The Marriage of
Cadmus and Harmony and "Ka: an utterly original, fascinating
interpretation of the work of Franz Kafka that is simultaneously an
unprecedented exploration into the mystery of Kafka himself.
What are Kafka's stories about? Are they dreams? Allegories?
Symbols? Things that happen every day? But where and when?
Countless answers have been offered, but the question still arouses
feelings of acute uncertainty. Many solutions have been proposed,
but the essential mystery remains intact. In this remarkable book,
Roberto Calasso sets out not to dispel the mystery but to let it be
illuminated by its own light. To that end, with his unique vision,
imagination, and intellectual acumen, Calasso attempts to enter the
flow, the tortuous movement, the physiology of the stories to
discover what they are meant to signify and to delve into a
puzzling question: why are K. and Josef K.-the protagonists of "The
Castle and "The Trial-so radically different from any other
characters in the history of the novel? So, in the end, "the most
basic question along the way is: Who is K.?
The culmination of the author's lifelong fascination with Kafka,
"K. is a book of significant literary importance, the fourth part
in a work in progress of which the previous volumes are "The Ruin
of Kasch, The Marriage of Cadmus and Harmony, and "Ka.
"From the Hardcover edition.
'All the books published by a certain publisher could be seen as
links in a single chain' In this fascinating memoir and manifesto
the author and publisher Roberto Calasso meditates on the art of
book publishing. With his signature erudition and polemical flair,
Calasso transcends Adelphi to look at the publishing industry as a
whole, from the essential importance of graphics, jackets and cover
flaps to the consequences of universal digitization. And he
outlines what he describes as the 'most hazardous and ambitious'
profile of what a publishing house can be: a book comprising many
books, akin to that of other twentieth-century publishers, from
Giulio Einaudi to Roger Straus, of whom the book offers brief
portraits.
Tourists, terrorists, secularists, hackers, fundamentalists,
transhumanists, algorithmicians: in this book Roberto Calasso
considers the tribes that inhabit and inform the world today. A
world that feels more elusive than ever before. This book, the
ninth part of a work in progress, is a meditation on the obscure
and ubiquitous process of transformation happening in societies
today, where distant echoes of Auden's The Age of Anxiety give way
to something altogether more unsettling.
A beguiling new reimagining of one of the most ancient and
mysterious origin myths of human civilization 'The Flood didn't
come suddenly as a big surprise. It came at the end of a long,
tormented story. Men just went on multiplying and the noise they
made was ever more irksome . . . I remember days of desperation.' A
long time ago, the gods grew tired of humans and decided to send a
flood to destroy them. But Ea, the god of fresh underground water,
didn't agree. He advised one of his devotees, Utnapishtim, to build
a quadrangular boat to house humans and animals, and saved these
living creatures from the Flood. Rather than punish Utnapishtim for
his disobedience, Enlil, King of the gods, granted the mortal
eternal life and banished him to the island of Dilmun. Thousands of
years later, when Sinbad the Sailor is shipwrecked and arrives on
that very same island, the two begin a conversation about courage,
loss, salvation and sacrifice. Following Calasso's masterful
retelling of ancient Greek myths in The Marriage of Cadmus and
Harmony and Indic myths in Ka, this richly imaginative work delves
into the crucible of our collective consciousness to reimagine the
origin stories of one of the earliest human civilizations.
Brilliant, inspired, and gloriously erudite, Literature and the Gods is the culmination of Roberto Calasso’s lifelong study of the gods in the human imagination. By uncovering the divine whisper that lies behind the best poetry and prose from across the centuries, Calasso gives us a renewed sense of the mystery and enchantment of great literature.
From the banishment of the classical divinities during the Age of Reason to their emancipation by the Romantics and their place in the literature of our own time, the history of the gods can also be read as a ciphered and splendid history of literary inspiration. Rewriting that story, Calasso carves out a sacred space for literature where the presence of the gods is discernible. His inquiry into the nature of “absolute literature” transports us to the realms of Dionysus and Orpheus, Baudelaire and Mallarmé, and prompts a lucid and impassioned defense of poetic form, even when apparently severed from any social function. Lyrical and assured, Literature and the Gods is an intensely engaging work of literary affirmation that deserves to be read alongside the masterpieces it celebrates.
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