Walcott, Derek - William A. Shullenberger (essay date November-December 2001)
William A. Shullenberger (essay date November-December 2001)
SOURCE: Shullenberger, William A. “An Iliad for Our Time: Walcott's Caribbean Epic.” Humanities 22, no. 6 (November-December 2001): 47-49.
[In the following essay, Shullenberger compares Walcott's epic poem Omeros to Homer's Iliad.]
Although we tend to assign the epic to the literary past as a bygone genre, Derek Walcott's Omeros, published in 1990, asserts the ongoing power of the epic to claim our attention and shape our understanding. The epic is a monumental literary form—an index to the depth and richness of a culture and the ultimate test of a writer's creative power. Homer's Iliad stands at the beginning of the epic tradition in western culture, and Walcott's Omeros is that tradition's most recent expression.
The epic is the collective memory of a people, offering poetic memory as a way to transcend the afflictions and...
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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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