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Break, Blow, Burn: Camille Paglia Reads Forty-three of the World's Best Poems

von Camille Paglia

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
5811140,826 (3.78)36
America's premier intellectual provocateur explores and celebrates a series of great poems of the Western tradition, including some surprising discoveries of her own. She brings new energy and insight to our understanding of poems we already know, such as masterpieces by Shakespeare, Donne, Shelley, Dickinson, Lowell, and Plath. She leads us to appreciate the artistry of writers with whom we may not be familiar, such as Chuck Wachtel and Wanda Coleman. And she hails the songwriter Joni Mitchell as a major contemporary poet. Daring, erudite, entertaining, and infused throughout with Paglia's inimitable style and passion, this book--and the dazzling mind behind it--will entice readers to begin or renew a passionate engagement with poetry.… (mehr)
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The title should have been "43 of the best poems in English" istead of "world's best poems". And some of these that Paglia finds so amazing are rather questionable ( )
  betty_s | Sep 13, 2023 |
A good introduction to a way of close reading of poetry. ( )
  mykl-s | Apr 16, 2023 |
I thoroughly enjoyed 95% of this book -- and the rest wasn't 'bad,' just less interesting.

Paglia's close readings of these 43 poems constitutes a master class in reading, understanding, and appreciating poetry, while remaining highly accessible. She never talks down to the reader, but she also (almost) never leaves her stranded, illustrating her references to other poets or movements with excerpts to illuminate them. The exception is her frequent references to "Petrarchan" poetry, which could have used an example or two more to help those of us who have not benefitted from an extensive classical education. However, I did find it helpful to read with a browser open next to me so I could look up poems like "Ode to a Grecian Urn" and read the whole text so I could better appreciate her comments.

She covers everything: word choice, meter, form, context within poetry as a whole, classical references, and the historical/cultural context of the poet -- and she does so in vivid, passionate, erudite fashion that can be easily understood by a reaonably bright lay person.

While it would be possible to read the chapters at random, Paglia reviews the poems in chronological order, and references the earlier works in later chapters: a good teacher building on her course material. This might not be a problem for someone who already already has a sophisticated understanding of these works, but the less-experienced reader will want to start at the beginning.

My favorite sections were her readings of "The Second Coming" and "Leda and the Swan" -- both of which I had read several times and felt I understood, but which she opened up and made far more deep and interesting.

Recommended for anyone who wants to know "what the fuss is" about poetry, those who have read some poetry but feel like they could have a deeper appreciation, college-bound high school students (to develop a more extensive background and to get an exhilerating introduction to what the study of literature can be like), any students of poetry or literature, or anyone who appreciates watching a brilliant mind at work/play with a much loved subject.

( )
  jsabrina | Jul 13, 2021 |
This book is a real refreshment -- a shower of [mostly; I could have done without "Woodstock":] great poems, with just enough stirring, insightful commentary to draw the reader deep into the pool of each poem's meanings and pleasures. The format is very successful, with each typographically well-preseented poem followed by three to five pages of thoughtful, extremely well written critique and commentary, including history, analysis, and politically fresh perspectives. Unlike other reviewers who didn't like the slection of poems, I really appreciated the mix of classic standards with modern poems I wasn't familiar with, and which seem to have been selected for their accessibility and power. (Only the final selection -- Joni Mitchell's "Woodstock" -- was out of its league.)

This was an ideal "car book," one I keep in the car and read in 15-minute episodes as I'm waiting for an appointment, or eating a meal [b:on the road|6288|The Road|Cormac McCarthy|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21E8H3D1JSL._SL75_.jpg|3355573]. It is a great way to bring poetry in, or back in, to your life, and to leaven a diet of more utilitarian or narrative reading. ( )
  oatleyr | Aug 22, 2020 |
Almost as good as an English Lit lecture by your favorite professor. ( )
  emilyingreen | May 28, 2014 |
In view of her wide knowledge, her expressive gifts, her crackling personality and the inherent credibility problems posed by looking too much at her ease on top of a pair of Jimmy Choos, it is remarkable how good Paglia can be at not putting herself first. From this book you could doubt several aspects of her taste in poetry. But you couldn't doubt her love of it...

One of her best attributes is well brought out: her refusal to modernize the past. Her thorough background in cultural history -- the Italians, who should be proud of her parentage, would call her preparatissima -- is always in play. Her entertaining wealth of up-to-date pop-culture allusion is merely the top dressing, and she is usually careful not to strain after a faddish point. In her exemplary analysis of Shelley's "Ozymandias," for example, she could easily have referred to the last scene of "Planet of the Apes," when Charlton Heston looks up at the Statue of Liberty's head just as Shelley's "traveler from an antique land" looked up at the truncated legs of stone. I was rather expecting her to. Perhaps she has realized, however, that the pace of forgetfulness is always accelerating, and that we have moved from an era of people who have never heard of Shelley to an era of people who have never heard of Charlton Heston.
hinzugefügt von SnootyBaronet | bearbeitenNew York Times, Clive James
 

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Introduction This book is intended for a general audience.
The sonnet was a medieval form perfected by the Italian poet Petrarch, who was inspired by the courtly love tradition of southern France.
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Wandering through London’s hell, Blake follows the model of Dante as poet-quester cataloging the horrors of the Inferno. A visitor to the storied British capital in 1793 would have seen a grand, expanding city in economic boom. But the poet, with telepathic hearing and merciless X-ray eyes, homes in on the suffering, dislocation, and hidden spiritual costs of rapid social transformation.
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America's premier intellectual provocateur explores and celebrates a series of great poems of the Western tradition, including some surprising discoveries of her own. She brings new energy and insight to our understanding of poems we already know, such as masterpieces by Shakespeare, Donne, Shelley, Dickinson, Lowell, and Plath. She leads us to appreciate the artistry of writers with whom we may not be familiar, such as Chuck Wachtel and Wanda Coleman. And she hails the songwriter Joni Mitchell as a major contemporary poet. Daring, erudite, entertaining, and infused throughout with Paglia's inimitable style and passion, this book--and the dazzling mind behind it--will entice readers to begin or renew a passionate engagement with poetry.

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