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Light, Grass, and Letter in April is the first book in English to
appear since the great Danish poet s death in January 2009. Light
(1962) and Grass (1963), her first published works, introduce her
genius for the music of everyday speech, and her approaches to the
themes she d pursue throughout her life: the primacy of nature, the
enigmatic boundaries between the self and the other, and the role
of language as a mediator between human experience and reality.
Letter in April (1979), Christensen s most intimate book, examines
love and loss, self and loss of self, echoing musical structures
developed by the French composer Olivier Messiaen. It was written
in collaboration with the Danish artist Johanne Foss, whose
accompanying drawings helped to catalyze the poems.
The Condition of Secrecy is a poignant collection of essays by
Inger Christensen, widely regarded as one of the most influential
Scandinavian writers of the twentieth century. As The New York
Times proclaimed, "Despite the rigorous structure that undergirds
her work-or more likely, because of it-Ms. Christensen's style is
lyrical, even playful." The same could be said of Christensen's
essays. Here, she formulates with increasing clarity the basis of
her approach to writing, and provides insights into how she
composed specific poetry volumes. Some essays are autobiographical
(with memories of Christensen's school years during the Nazi
occupation of Denmark), and others are political, touching on the
Cold War and Chernobyl. The Condition of Secrecy also covers the
Ars Poetica of Lu Chi (261-303 CE); William Blake and Isaac Newton;
and such topics as randomness as a universal force and the role of
the writer as an agent of social change. The Condition of Secrecy
confirms that Inger Christensen is "a true singer of the syllables"
(C. D. Wright), and "a formalist who makes her own rules, then
turns the game around with another rule" (Eliot Weinberger).
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Alphabet (Paperback)
Inger Christensen; Translated by Susanna Neid, Susanna Nied
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R320
R264
Discovery Miles 2 640
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Inger Christensen is one of Denmark's best-known poets. Her poetry
reflects a complex philosophical background, yet it has enjoyed
wide public popularity. Many of her poems have a visionary quality,
yet she is a paradoxically down-to-earth visionary, focusing on the
simple stuff of everyday life and in it discovering the
metaphysical, as if by chance.In alphabet, Christensen creates a
framework of psalm-like forms that unfold like expanding universes,
crystallizing into words both the beauty and the potential for
destruction that permeate our world and our times. In this
collection, she has created a system by combining the alphabet with
Fibonnaci's numeric sequence, in which each number is equal to the
sum of the two preceding numbers: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, etc.
alphabet is about the relationship between people and nature and,
like it, is itself a form of creation. With the word exist as the
pivot, the poems move -- from the first wondering confirmation,
apricot trees exist -- out into the world to life and death, the
planet and calamity.
The Dedalus Press series of budget pamphlets presents works by
major voices in world poetry. Inger Christensen (1935 - 2009) was
one of Denmark's best-known poets and was widely celebrated
throughout Europe and the United States. She wrote several volumes
of poetry as well as novels, plays, children's books and essays,
winning many major European prizes and awards, including the
prestigious Nordic Prize in 1994. Butterfly Valley is a tour de
force, exploring the major themes of life, love, death and art. The
form is simple yet complex, a sequence of fifteen sonnets building
to a final sonnet of extraordinary power composed of lines taken
from the preceding fourteen sonnets in the sequence. Life, love,
art, all are transient - like the butterfly - yet beautiful, even
in their ephemerality. The translator Susanna Nied is a former
insructor of English and comparative literature at San Diego State
University in California. Her translation of Inger Christensen's
alphabet won the 1982 ASF/PEN Translation Prize.
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