Zagajewski, Adam - Charles Simic (essay date 1994)
Charles Simic (essay date 1994)
SOURCE: A Review of Canvas, in Partisan Review, Vol. 61, No. 4, Fall, 1994, pp. 704-8.
[In the following review, Simic suggests that Zagajewski explores the philosophical and imaginative homelessness of modern men and women.]
… When Adam Zagajewski's selected poems were first published in English in 1985, it was clear that he was a major poet. Tremor was a book that reminded one of other great contemporary Polish poets, Milosz, Herbert and Szymborska, especially in its preoccupation with history and its love of irony. It was equally clear, however, that Zagajewski is an original voice. This new, well-translated collection confirms it. His subject, if one could generalize about a poet so intellectually complex, is the epoch's end. Not solely the end of a long and murderous century, but the death of ideas that underwrote all our now failed Utopian projects:
Philosophically and...
[The entire page is 571 words long]
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Criticism
- Czeslaw Milosz (essay date 1985)
- Stanislaw Baranczak (essay date 1986)
- Eva Hoffman (essay date 1986)
- D. J. Enright (essay date 1987)
- Sven Birkerts (essay date 1989)
- Stanislaw Baranczak (essay date 1991)
- Donald Revell (essay date 1992)
- Joachim T. Baer (essay date 1992)
- Robert Pinsky (essay date 1993)
- Bill Marx (essay date 1993)
- Charles Simic (essay date 1994)
- Jaroisaw Anders (essay date 1998)
- Adam Kirsch (essay date 1998)
- John Haines (essay date 1998)
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