There have been many books on early modernist poetry, not so many on its various sequels, and still fewer on the currents and cross-currents of poetry since World War II. Until now there has been no single comprehensive history of British and American poetry throughout the half century from the mid-1920s to the recent past. This David Perkins is uniquely equipped to provide; only a critic as well informed as he in the whole range of twentieth-century poetry could offer a lucid, coherent, and structured account of so diverse a body of work. Perkins devotes major discussions to the later careers of the first Modernist poets, such as Eliot, Pound, Stevens, and Williams, and to their immediate followers in the United States, E. E. Cummings, Archibald MacLeish, and Hart Crane; to W. H. Auden, Dylan Thomas, and the period style of the 1930s; to the emergence of the New Criticism and of a poetry reflecting its tenets in William Empson, John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, John Berryman, and Robert Lowell, and to the reaction against this style; to postwar Great Britain from Philip Larkin and the "Movement" in the 1950s to Ted Hughes, Charles Tomlinson, and Geoffrey Hill; to the theory and style of "open form" in Charles Olson and Robert Duncan; to Allen Ginsberg and the Beat poetry of the 1960s; to the poetry of women's experience in Sylvia Plath and Adrienne Rich; to the work of Black poets from Robert Hayden and Gwendolyn Brooks to Amiri Baraka; and to Elizabeth Bishop, W. S. Merwin, A. R. Ammons, John Ashbery, and James Merrill. Perkins discusses some 160 poets, mentioning many others more briefly, and does not hesitate to explain, to criticize, to admire, to render judgments. He clarifies the complex interrelations of individuals, groups, and movements and the contexts in which the poets worked: not only the predecessors and contemporaries they responded to but the journals that published them, the expectations of the audience, changing premises about poetry, the writings of critics, developments in other arts, and the momentous events of political and social history. Readers seeking guidance through the maze of postwar poetry will find the second half of the book especially illuminating.
评分
评分
评分
评分
如果说大多数诗歌史是关于“发生了什么”,那么这本书则更侧重于“为什么会以这种方式发生”。它对于技术革新,比如印刷术变化和新的传播媒介对诗歌文本形态影响的讨论,非常具有前瞻性。作者没有将诗歌视为脱离时代的产物,而是将其置于一个巨大的技术和社会变迁的熔炉中进行考察。其中关于口述传统如何反哺给书面现代诗歌的分析,尤为精彩,它提供了一个全新的维度来审视那些看似完全依赖印刷品的现代作品。整本书的论证脉络清晰,逻辑严密,但绝不板正。它在严肃的学术探讨和对诗歌艺术本身的热爱之间,找到了一个近乎完美的平衡点。读完后,我感觉自己对那些曾经感到遥不可及的诗歌大师们,有了一种更贴近、更人性化的理解,不再是高高在上的神像,而是有血有肉的探索者。
评分这部诗歌选集,收录了横跨数个时代的英美诗歌精华,着实让人耳目一新。初翻阅时,那些熟悉的诗句仿佛在耳边低语,但细细品味之下,才发现编者在选篇上的独到匠心。它不仅仅是简单地罗列经典,更是试图勾勒出一幅清晰的现代诗歌演变图景。比如,对意象派的选取就格外精准,那些简洁而富有张力的画面,让人体会到诗歌从繁复到精炼的巨大转变。我特别欣赏它在介绍背景资料时的那种克制与深入,没有过多的冗余,却能准确点出每位诗人创作风格的关键转折点。读完某一章节,你几乎能感受到那个时代特有的社会情绪是如何被诗人们转化为独一无二的语言构建的。这本厚重的书,与其说是一本教材,不如说是一张通往二十世纪诗歌心灵世界的邀请函,它引导我们去探究那些看似晦涩的文本背后,隐藏着的关于人性、社会与语言边界的深刻思考。每一次重读,都有新的理解浮现,如同拨开云雾,看见更广阔的天地。
评分这本书的编辑选择,无疑是充满冒险精神的。它敢于将一些在主流评论界长期被边缘化的女性诗人和少数族裔诗人的作品纳入核心叙事线索,并且给予了足够的篇幅来分析她们的贡献。这种包容性,让原本可能略显单调的“现代诗歌史”瞬间鲜活起来,充满了多元的视角和复杂的情感光谱。我特别欣赏书中对于诗歌形式与性别表达之间关系的探讨,那段文字简直是精彩绝伦,它揭示了女性诗人是如何在父权制定的语言框架内,通过精妙的文字游戏和句法重构,发出自己独特的声音。它不是简单地将这些诗人“平权式”地加入列表,而是深入剖析了她们在美学和意识形态上对既定规范的挑战。阅读这本书的过程,就像参加了一场精彩的辩论赛,双方观点鲜明,论据充分,让人在思想的碰撞中获得极大的满足感。
评分简直是诗歌研究者的福音,这本书的学术严谨性毋庸置疑,但其叙述方式却出乎意料地引人入胜,完全没有传统学术著作的枯燥感。它对于流派更迭的梳理,简直是教科书级别的范例。我尤其关注了战后“反诗歌”倾向的讨论,作者巧妙地将几位具有颠覆性思想的诗人放在一起进行对比分析,揭示了他们如何通过解构传统格律和意义,来回应战后世界带来的巨大精神创伤。其中关于“声音的政治性”那一节的论述,给了我极大的启发,它不再将诗歌视为孤立的美学实践,而是将其置于更宏大的文化权力结构中进行考察。装帧设计也十分考究,纸张的质感和字体排版的舒适度,都极大地提升了长时间阅读的体验。这本书无疑是为那些不满足于停留在表面欣赏,而渴望深入挖掘诗歌内在机制的读者量身定做的深度指南。
评分我必须承认,最初拿起这本时,有点担心它会过于侧重英国的传统,但事实证明,它对美国现代主义的捕捉同样敏锐而全面。尤其是对两位重量级美国诗人的后期作品分析,简直是神来之笔。作者没有陷入对他们早期“光辉时期”的盲目赞美,而是深入探讨了他们在晚年如何应对名望、衰老以及身份认同的危机,这些内容在其他概览性质的选集中是很少见到的。这种批判性的眼光,使得全书的论述充满了活力和张力。阅读过程中,我经常停下来,去查阅那些被提及的、但我并不熟悉的早期小众期刊的引用,这间接拓宽了我对那个时代文学生态的认知。它像一个技艺精湛的向导,不仅带你去看那些著名的风景,还领你走进那些鲜为人知却同样重要的秘密花园,让我对“现代”这个概念有了更细微的层次感。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.wenda123.org All Rights Reserved. 图书目录大全 版权所有