In the first anthology of its kind to be published outside New Zealand in decades, "Twenty Contemporary New Zealand Poets" makes available to British readers the freshness and vitality of current New Zealand poetry. Starting in the mid-1980s, it captures turning points in the work of Allen Curnow and Bill Manhire, poets who are well known across the English-speaking world, and charts the advent of a generation of younger writers. These poets play freely with lyric expectations, extending the boundaries of poetry through constant formal innovation, intellectual inquiry and a fiercely fond attention to the uniqueness of New Zealand life and speech. Poems by writers born in the mid-1960s explore new ways of talking about the bracing challenge of living in a bicultural and multicultural society. With an introduction illuminating themes and contexts, and reflections by the poets themselves, "Twenty Contemporary New Zealand Poets" forms an indispensable map of a distinctive literary landscape.
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Broschur/Paperback
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Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 213 mm
Breite: 135 mm
Dicke: 15 mm
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ISBN-13
978-1-85754-976-8 (9781857549768)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Robyn Marsack is the director of the Scottish Poetry Library in Edinburgh. She has translated several French books, including The Way of the World and co-edited Intimate Expanses: XXV Scottish Poems 1978-2002. Andrew Johnstone is the editor of the International Herald Tribune in Paris, the editor of Moonlight: New Zealand Poems on Death and Dying, and author of How to Talk and Sol. He won the 1994 New Zealand Book Award for poetry.