by Édouard Glissant edited by Jeff Humphries translated by Melissa Manolas
University of Minnesota Press, 2019 Cloth: 978-0-8166-4194-9 | Paper: 978-0-8166-4195-6 Library of Congress Classification PQ3949.2.G53A24 2005 Dewey Decimal Classification 841.914
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
The complete poems of the two-time finalist for the Nobel Prize in Literature, available in English for the first time
This volume collects and translates—most for the first time—the nine volumes of poetry published by Édouard Glissant, a poet, novelist, and critic increasingly recognized as one of the great writers of the twentieth century. The poems bring to life what Glissant calls “an archipelago-like reality,” partaking of the exchanges between Europe and its former colonies, between humans and their geographies, between the poet and the natural world.
Reciting and re-creating histories of the African diaspora, Columbus’s “discovery” of the New World, the slave trade, and the West Indies, Glissant underscores the role of poetic language in changing both past and present irrevocably. As translator Jeff Humphries writes in his introduction, Glissant’s poetry embraces the aesthetic creed of the French symbolists Mallarmé and Rimbaud (“The poet must make himself into a seer”) and aims at nothing less than a hallucinatory experience of imagination in which the differences among poem, reader, and subject dissolve into one immediate present.
Born in Martinique in 1928, influenced by the controversial Martinican poet/politician Aimé Césaire, and educated at the Sorbonne in Paris, Édouard Glissant has emerged as one of the most influential postcolonial theorists, novelists, playwrights, and poets not only in the Caribbean but also in contemporary French letters. He has twice been a finalist for the Nobel Prize in Literature as well as the recipient of both the Prix Renaudot and the Prix Charles Veillon in France. His works include Poetics of Relation, Caribbean Discourse, Faulkner Mississippi, and the novel The Ripening. He currently serves as Distinguished Professor of French at City University of New York, Graduate Center.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Jeff Humphries is Louisiana State University Foundation Distinguished Professor of French, English, and Comparative Literature. He has published several books of poetry, fiction, essays, and literary criticism, including Borealis (Minnesota, 2002).
Édouard Glissant is one of the most influential postcolonial theorists, novelists, playwrights, and poets not only in the Caribbean but also in contemporary French letters. He has twice been a finalist for the Nobel Prize in Literature as well as the recipient of both the Prix Renaudot and the Prix Charles Veillon in France. His works include Poetics of Relation, Caribbean Discourse, Faulkner Mississippi, and the novel The Ripening. He currently serves as Distinguished Professor of French at City University of New York, Graduate Center.
REVIEWS
"The magnificent work of one of the most important contemporary novelists, essayists, and poets in the field of what we in Europe and North America call postcolonial literature."—American Book Review
"Reading or re-reading these texts, published over half a century, one is struck by the power of this poetry, the extraordinary persistence in its original inspiration and the manner in which it announces and then exemplifies the theories developed in Poetics of Relation or Caribbean Discourse."—Literature and Arts of the Americas
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Introduction Jeff Humphries
The Collected Poems of Édouard Glissant
Riveted Blood
Eyes Voice
November
Savage Reading
Rock
Slow Train
Tree Great Tree
Black Smoke
Elements
Nourishing Air
Cities
Confession
Vertigo in Cold Weather
Glory
To Die, Not to Die
Temptations
Solitude
Beauty
Abrupt
Mainstay
The Dead and Living Tree
A Field of Islands
The Restless Earth
Theater
Ocean
Incantation
Morning
The Bay of the Sky
Secret Cliff
Promenade of Solitary Death
The Book of Offerings
The House of Sands
Verses
Consecration
The Indies
Black Salt
The First Day
Carthage
Salt Taxes
Africa
Wounds
High Noon
Acclamation
Yokes
Gorée
Burned Field
Fats
House for the Dead
Behanzin
Country
Iron-dogs
Letters of Calling
Country
In Savane Square
Privileged Prose
Factory Still
Country
Moreover
Prose
Dlan
Dlan
Dlan
The Doubter
The Doubter
Trace
Role
Ashes 1
Language
Country
Deafer Than the Sea
Salt Marshes
Country
Pretty Men
Green Ray
Vaval
Mangroves
Poetic
Cactus
In Actuality
Study Days
The Alchemist's Fire
Fiefs
Ideal
Ball and Chain or Ash
Strike
"Within the Budding Pineapple Groves"
Guadeloupe
Ones
Throttle
Tomorrows
Dream Country, Real Country
Country
The Country of Before
Ata-Eli, the Blind Man, and Ichneumon
Song of Ichneumon
For Laoka
Song of Thael and Matthew
For Mycea
Country
Traces
Fastes
The Great Chaoses
Bayou
The Great Chaoses
The Stolen Eye
Wooded Regions
The Volcano's Water
by Édouard Glissant edited by Jeff Humphries translated by Melissa Manolas
University of Minnesota Press, 2019 Cloth: 978-0-8166-4194-9 Paper: 978-0-8166-4195-6
The complete poems of the two-time finalist for the Nobel Prize in Literature, available in English for the first time
This volume collects and translates—most for the first time—the nine volumes of poetry published by Édouard Glissant, a poet, novelist, and critic increasingly recognized as one of the great writers of the twentieth century. The poems bring to life what Glissant calls “an archipelago-like reality,” partaking of the exchanges between Europe and its former colonies, between humans and their geographies, between the poet and the natural world.
Reciting and re-creating histories of the African diaspora, Columbus’s “discovery” of the New World, the slave trade, and the West Indies, Glissant underscores the role of poetic language in changing both past and present irrevocably. As translator Jeff Humphries writes in his introduction, Glissant’s poetry embraces the aesthetic creed of the French symbolists Mallarmé and Rimbaud (“The poet must make himself into a seer”) and aims at nothing less than a hallucinatory experience of imagination in which the differences among poem, reader, and subject dissolve into one immediate present.
Born in Martinique in 1928, influenced by the controversial Martinican poet/politician Aimé Césaire, and educated at the Sorbonne in Paris, Édouard Glissant has emerged as one of the most influential postcolonial theorists, novelists, playwrights, and poets not only in the Caribbean but also in contemporary French letters. He has twice been a finalist for the Nobel Prize in Literature as well as the recipient of both the Prix Renaudot and the Prix Charles Veillon in France. His works include Poetics of Relation, Caribbean Discourse, Faulkner Mississippi, and the novel The Ripening. He currently serves as Distinguished Professor of French at City University of New York, Graduate Center.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Jeff Humphries is Louisiana State University Foundation Distinguished Professor of French, English, and Comparative Literature. He has published several books of poetry, fiction, essays, and literary criticism, including Borealis (Minnesota, 2002).
Édouard Glissant is one of the most influential postcolonial theorists, novelists, playwrights, and poets not only in the Caribbean but also in contemporary French letters. He has twice been a finalist for the Nobel Prize in Literature as well as the recipient of both the Prix Renaudot and the Prix Charles Veillon in France. His works include Poetics of Relation, Caribbean Discourse, Faulkner Mississippi, and the novel The Ripening. He currently serves as Distinguished Professor of French at City University of New York, Graduate Center.
REVIEWS
"The magnificent work of one of the most important contemporary novelists, essayists, and poets in the field of what we in Europe and North America call postcolonial literature."—American Book Review
"Reading or re-reading these texts, published over half a century, one is struck by the power of this poetry, the extraordinary persistence in its original inspiration and the manner in which it announces and then exemplifies the theories developed in Poetics of Relation or Caribbean Discourse."—Literature and Arts of the Americas
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Introduction Jeff Humphries
The Collected Poems of Édouard Glissant
Riveted Blood
Eyes Voice
November
Savage Reading
Rock
Slow Train
Tree Great Tree
Black Smoke
Elements
Nourishing Air
Cities
Confession
Vertigo in Cold Weather
Glory
To Die, Not to Die
Temptations
Solitude
Beauty
Abrupt
Mainstay
The Dead and Living Tree
A Field of Islands
The Restless Earth
Theater
Ocean
Incantation
Morning
The Bay of the Sky
Secret Cliff
Promenade of Solitary Death
The Book of Offerings
The House of Sands
Verses
Consecration
The Indies
Black Salt
The First Day
Carthage
Salt Taxes
Africa
Wounds
High Noon
Acclamation
Yokes
Gorée
Burned Field
Fats
House for the Dead
Behanzin
Country
Iron-dogs
Letters of Calling
Country
In Savane Square
Privileged Prose
Factory Still
Country
Moreover
Prose
Dlan
Dlan
Dlan
The Doubter
The Doubter
Trace
Role
Ashes 1
Language
Country
Deafer Than the Sea
Salt Marshes
Country
Pretty Men
Green Ray
Vaval
Mangroves
Poetic
Cactus
In Actuality
Study Days
The Alchemist's Fire
Fiefs
Ideal
Ball and Chain or Ash
Strike
"Within the Budding Pineapple Groves"
Guadeloupe
Ones
Throttle
Tomorrows
Dream Country, Real Country
Country
The Country of Before
Ata-Eli, the Blind Man, and Ichneumon
Song of Ichneumon
For Laoka
Song of Thael and Matthew
For Mycea
Country
Traces
Fastes
The Great Chaoses
Bayou
The Great Chaoses
The Stolen Eye
Wooded Regions
The Volcano's Water
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC