Walcott, Derek - Edward Hirsch (essay date autumn 1997)
Edward Hirsch (essay date autumn 1997)
SOURCE: Hirsch, Edward. “Poetry: Derek Walcott.” Wilson Quarterly 21 (autumn 1997): 109-11.
[In the following essay, Hirsch offers a positive assessment of Walcott's career as a poet and playwright.]
There is a force of exultation, a celebration of luck, when a writer finds himself a witness to the early morning of a culture that is defining itself, branch by branch, leaf by leaf, in that self-defining dawn,” Derek Walcott said in his Nobel Prize lecture for 1992. That force of exultation and celebration of luck, along with a sense of benediction and obligation, a continuous effort of memory and excavation, and a “frightening duty” to “a fresh language and a fresh people,” have defined Walcott's work for the past 50 years. He has always been a poet of great verbal resources and skills engaged in a complex struggle to render his native Caribbean culture: the New World—not Eden but a...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Lloyd W. Brown (essay date 1976)
- Valerie Trueblood (essay date May-June 1978)
- Andrew Salkey (essay date winter 1982)
- Robert Bensen (essay date spring 1986)
- David Mason (essay date spring 1986)
- Derek Walcott and Rebekah Presson (interview date 1992)
- Derek Walcott and Rose Styron (interview date May-June 1997)
- Edward Hirsch (essay date autumn 1997)
- Robert D. Hamner (essay date 1997)
- James Wieland (essay date 1998)
- John Thieme (essay date 1999)
- Charles Lock (essay date spring 2000)
- Derek Walcott and William R. Ferris (interview date November-December 2001)
- William A. Shullenberger (essay date November-December 2001)
- Jahan Ramazani (essay date 2001)
- Isidore Okpewho (essay date 2002)
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