Поиск по каталогу |
(строгое соответствие)
|
- Профессиональная
- Научно-популярная
- Художественная
- Публицистика
- Детская
- Искусство
- Хобби, семья, дом
- Спорт
- Путеводители
- Блокноты, тетради, открытки
Poetry and Politics of Decolonization. Yeats, Tagore, Senghor, C?saire, and Neruda
В наличии
Местонахождение: Алматы | Состояние экземпляра: новый |
Бумажная
версия
версия
Автор: Linn Cary Mehta
ISBN: 9783659628931
Год издания: 2015
Формат книги: 60×90/16 (145×215 мм)
Количество страниц: 400
Издательство: LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
Цена: 38674 тг
Положить в корзину
Способы доставки в город Алматы * комплектация (срок до отгрузки) не более 2 рабочих дней |
Самовывоз из города Алматы (пункты самовывоза партнёра CDEK) |
Курьерская доставка CDEK из города Москва |
Доставка Почтой России из города Москва |
Аннотация: Professor Mehta examines the interaction between poetry and politics in colonies and former colonies of England, France, and Spain during the era of decolonization. The years between 1914 and 1950 coincide with the growth of nationalism and form a bridge from colonial to postcolonial literatures. Many of the poets involved with the struggle for decolonization became the voice of their respective nations. At both a political and linguistic level, their poetry reveals a struggle for independence and self-definition. Modernist form plays a decisive role in this struggle. These poets cannot be read independently of their involvement with their countries' individual struggles for political and cultural freedom. Yeats and Tagore redefined Irish and Bengali poetry, respectively, in the early twentieth century in opposition to the British colonial presence; the poetry of Senghor and C?saire creates the concept of negritude as a reaction to France's policy of assimilating its colonials; and Neruda in his poetry, long after independence from Spain, marks out an identity for Chile and Latin America that challenges European and North American traditions.
Ключевые слова: Poetry, Politics, Decolonization, Mistral, Tagore, Yeats, Senghor, C?saire, Neruda