A groundbreaking reassessment of the relationship between Federico Garcia Lorca and American poet Philip Cummings and its impact on the poems in Lorca's landmark collection, Poet in New York.
Lorca in Vermont tells the story of two young lovers with mismatched goals and expectations: Spanish poet Federico Garcia Lorca, already well established in his career, who sought a sustained romantic relationship with another man, and Philip Cummings, a new college graduate eight years his junior with no interest in long-term commitment or in challenging social conventions. Based on over a decade of research, Lorca in Vermont explores the full course of Lorca's relationship with Cummings, an affair that spanned three years and two continents. Combining unique access to primary sources, extensive original research, and a fresh analysis of published sources, the book describes not only the pair's history as a couple but also the suppression of their relationship by Lorca scholars after the poet's tragic death in 1936. Perhaps most importantly, it reveals previously unrecognized links between the disappointment and loss Lorca experienced in his relationship with Cummings and at least eight of the poems in his landmark collection Poet in New York, a work that has long intrigued and inspired other writers. The book brilliantly blends compelling new findings and an engaging narrative style in a page-turning tale that is a must read for anyone interested in Lorca and his legacy.
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Verlagsort
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Maße
Höhe: 216 mm
Breite: 140 mm
Dicke: 20 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-8263-6935-2 (9780826369352)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Patricia A. Billingsley is an independent researcher and biographer with a special interest in poets and writers of the early twentieth century. Originally based in western Massachusetts, she maintains close ties to the Vermont region where Lorca and Cummings created their own private Eden in August 1929.