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Selected Prose Works [Hardback]

4.09/5 (11 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 224 pages, weight: 401 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Oct-2010
  • Izdevniecība: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472070959
  • ISBN-13: 9780472070954
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 224 pages, weight: 401 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Oct-2010
  • Izdevniecība: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472070959
  • ISBN-13: 9780472070954
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Summary: Constantine Cavafy (1863-1933) is arguably the most important modern poet of Greece and Greek culture. This book collects Cavafy's more interesting prose pieces and translates those that originally appeared in Greek.

The first appearance in English of important prose works by poet C. P. Cavafy


"A timely and significant supplement to C. P. Cavafy's poetic canon, the Selected Prose Works, eloquently translated and meticulously annotated by Peter Jeffreys, allows readers yet another creative engagement with the greatest Greek writer since antiquity. Marked by a wide and intriguing range of interests, these writings offer a rich trove for general readers and scholars alike, who from now on will find it difficult to discuss Cavafy's poetry without reference to his prose."
---Vassilis Lambropoulos, C. P. Cavafy Professor of Modern Greek, University of Michigan

"Peter Jeffreys gives us a rare gift---access to Constantine Cavafy's prose work. Through his intelligent translation, these texts, which range from literary criticism to personal notes, from essays on the Greek language to the Parthenon marbles, offer unexpected entry into the mind of one of the twentieth century's greatest literary figures. They suggest new ways to think about not only Cavafy's remarkable poetry but also the man himself. An indispensable companion for all who love Cavafy's work."
---Gregory Jusdanis, The Ohio State University

"Once you've felt his influence, you won't need telling that Cavafy is unique in his distinctive voice, his quiet humor, and his unassertive culture."
---Frank Kermode, Formerly Lord Northcliffe Professor of Modern English Literature at University College, London, and King Edward VII Professor of English Literature, University of Cambridge

Constantine Cavafy (1863–1933) is arguably the most important modern poet of Greece and Greek culture. Long a resident of Egypt and then Constantinople, Cavafy in his poems and prose works tended to focus on Greco-Roman antiquity, on Greece's national identity, and on personal and mythological images and themes including his ethnicity and sexual identity. He wrote some 150 poems, plus a few works in collaboration with his brother John.

His poetical works have been much translated and discussed, but until now, very little consideration has been given to his prose works, in part because many remained untranslated from the original Greek. This book collects Cavafy's more interesting prose pieces and translates those that originally appeared in Greek.

Of the forty pieces included, only thirteen have previously appeared in print, and of those thirteen only a few were in English. The pieces include essays, "prose poems," short stories, self-assessments, and considerations of other poets, including John Keats. This significant new collection offers a different perspective on the well-known Cavafy.

Peter Jeffreys, Assistant Professor of English at Suffolk University in Boston, received a Doctorate in English Literature from the University of Toronto. He is the author of Eastern Questions: Hellenism and Orientalism in the Writings of E.M. Forster and C.P. Cavafy and the editor of The Forster-Cavafy Letters: Friends at a Slight Angle.  He is currently working on a bio-critical study of C. P. Cavafy and the decadent tradition.

Cover image copyright © David Levine

Acknowledgments ix
Preface xi
Translator's Introduction xiii
I ESSAYS
Asterisks indicate essays originally composed in English
1 What I Remember of My Essay on Christopulus
3(2)
2 Fragment on Lycanthropy
5(5)
3 Fragment on Woman and the Ancients
10(1)
4 Fragment on Beliefs Concerning the Soul
11(1)
5 Persian Manners
12(2)
6 Masks
14(1)
7 Misplaced Tenderness
15(2)
8 Coral from a Mythological Perspective
17(2)
9 Romaic Folk-lore of Enchanted Animals
19(2)
10 Give Back the Elgin Marbles
21(2)
11 An Update on the Elgin Marbles
23(4)
12 Shakespeare on Life
27(4)
13 Professor Blackie on the Modern Greek Language
31(5)
14 The Byzantine Poets
36(5)
15 Our Museum
41(2)
16 Lamia
43(11)
17 The Cypriot Question
54(4)
18 Traces of Greek Thought in Shakespeare
58(2)
19 Greek Scholars in Roman Houses
60(6)
20 A Page of Trojan History
66(2)
21 On the Intellectual Affinity of Egypt and the West
68(5)
II FICTION AND CREATIVE WRITING
22 A Night Out in Kalinderi
73(4)
23 The Mountain
77(3)
24 Garments
80(1)
25 The Pleasure Brigade
81(1)
26 Musings of an Aging Artist
82(2)
27 The Ships
84(2)
28 In Broad Daylight
86(11)
III LITERARY REFLECTIONS
29 On Browning
97(6)
30 The Last Days of Odysseus
103(9)
31 A Few Pages on the Sophists
112(4)
32 Philosophical Scrutiny: Part One
116(4)
33 On The Chronicle of Morea
120(3)
34 Independence
123(4)
IV MISCELLANEOUS
35 On Saint Simeon the Stylite
127(1)
36 Greeks and Not Romans
128(1)
37 Twenty-Seven Notes on Poetics and Ethics
129(11)
38 A Note on Obsolete Words
140(1)
39 For a Student Anthology of Demotic Songs
141(2)
40 On the Poet C.P. Cavafy
143(2)
Translator's Notes 145