Char, René - Michael Worton (essay date 1992)
Michael Worton (essay date 1992)
SOURCE: Worton, Michael. Introduction to The Dawn Breakers Les Matinaux, pp. 11-45. Newcastle Upon Tyne, England: Bloodaxe Books, 1992.
[In the following excerpt, Worton offers a thematic commentary and introduction to his translation of Char's Les Matinaux.]
René Char (1907-88) is often described as a poet of nostalgia who is essentially concerned with his own childhood in Provence and with the pre-industrial and pre-nuclear world. His poems have also often been described as hermetic, as “difficult” or “intellectual”. Internationally recognised as one of the most important French poets since the Surrealists, perhaps even since Paul Valéry, he is respected as a poet-philosopher but he has never become a popular poet. This says much about what many modern, urban readers expect from contemporary poetry: they want to encounter both familiar, “relevant” images and a language which corresponds to...
[The entire page is 11573 words long]
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Criticism
- Kenneth Douglas (essay date fall-winter 1948)
- Wallace Fowlie (essay date 1958)
- Times Literary Supplement (review date 21 October 1965)
- Paulène Aspel (essay date spring 1968)
- Virginia A. LaCharité (essay date 1968)
- Virginia A. LaCharité (essay date spring 1976)
- Mary Ann Caws (essay date 1977)
- Mary Ann Caws (essay date 1977)
- Paulène Aspel (review date spring 1980)
- James R. Lawler (review date spring 1984)
- John Porter Houston (essay date September 1985)
- Virginia A. LaCharité (essay date 1989)
- Charles D. Minahen (essay date fall-winter 1989)
- Michael Worton (essay date 1992)
- Jean Starobinski (essay date 1994)
- Michael Bishop (essay date 1994)
- Van Kelly (essay date winter 1995)
- Van Kelly (essay date 2001)
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