Children of the Mire

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A01=Octavio Paz
Author_Octavio Paz
avant-garde poetry
baudelaire
breton
Category=FR
dada
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eq_fiction
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eq_nobargain
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gongora
huidobro
latin american
mexico
modern poetry
modernismo
neruda
nerval
norton lectures
novalis
octavio paz
romanticism
rousseau
surrealism
symbolism
temporality
vallejo
wordsworth

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674116290
  • Weight: 295g
  • Publication Date: 22 May 1991
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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“An instant classic.”—Calvin Bedient, New Republic

Mexico’s greatest modern poet reflects upon the twilight of modernity.

If Octavio Paz was “one of the greatest poets that the Spanish-language world has ever produced,” as Mario Vargas Llosa once said, he was also an astoundingly erudite critic. Here, in his 1971–1972 Norton Lectures, the Nobel laureate offers a potent and prescient diagnosis of the condition of poetry in the wake of literary modernism.

Poetry’s relationship with modernity, Paz argues, has always been tempestuous. If modern temporality posited the forward march of history toward the gates of a secular future, poetry is the “world of nonsequential time...a spiral sequence which turns ceaselessly without ever returning completely to its beginning.” And if modernity is the age of revolution, a negation of the past propelled by critical rationality, poetry chafes against the strictures of reason, aimlessly dwelling in dreams, eroticism, mythology, and other realms inaccessible to revolutionary fervor. Meanwhile, avant-garde attempts to embrace the “aesthetics of change” and recreate the revolutionary spirit in verse have exhausted themselves. What’s left, Paz maintains, is to return to the sinuous temporality of the poem itself, the irresolvable tension between the historical text and the abolition of history in the lyrical present.

Mapping the changing meanings of modernity across a wide range of poetic movements, from English and German Romanticism, French Surrealism, and Latin American modernismo to the avant-garde experiments of Vicente García-Huidobro, Children of the Mire is not only a dazzlingly cosmopolitan work of literary criticism. It is also a revealing portrait of the one of the defining voices of Latin American literature.

Octavio Paz (1914–1998) was a renowned Mexican poet, essayist, diplomat, and cultural critic. The author of more than forty volumes of poetry and prose, he was the winner of the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 1982, the Miguel de Cervantes Prize in 1981, and the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1990. Rachel Phillips is a translator and author of The Poetic Modes of Octavio Paz. She has translated several works by Paz into English, including Marcel Duchamp and The Labyrinth of Solitude.

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