About this item
Highlights
- This anthology reflects a search of the Ukrainian nation for its identity, the roots of which lie deep inside Ukrainian-language poetry.
- 416 Pages
- Poetry, Anthologies (multiple authors)
Description
About the Book
This anthology reflects a search of the Ukrainian nation for its identity, the roots of which lie deep inside Ukrainian-language poetry. Some of the included poets are well-known locally and internationally.Book Synopsis
This anthology reflects a search of the Ukrainian nation for its identity, the roots of which lie deep inside Ukrainian-language poetry. Some of the included poets are well-known locally and internationally; among them are Serhiy Zhadan, Halyna Kruk, Ostap Slyvynsky, Marianna Kijanowska, Oleh Kotsarev, Anna Bagriana and, of course, the living legend of Ukrainian poetry, Vasyl Holoborodko. The next Ukrainian poetic generation also features prominently in the collection. Such poets as Les Beley, Olena Herasymyuk, Myroslav Laiuk, Hanna Malihon, Taras Malkovych, Julia Musakovska, Julia Stahivska and Lyuba Yakimchuk are the ones Ukrainians like to read today, and each of them already has an excellent reputation abroad due to festival appearances and translations to European languages. The work collected here documents poetry in Ukraine responding to challenges of the time by forging a radical new poetic, reconsidering writing techniques and language itself.
Edited and translated from the Ukrainian by Anatoly Kudryavitsky.
A bilingual edition.
Review Quotes
"All originals have been published side by side with Kudryavitsky's fine translations, which do poetic justice to these texts and the creative laboratories they evoke by finding metaphors and expressions that are true to the original-a very difficult task at times given the potential untranslatability of some verses." Svitlana (Lana) Krys, Slavic & East European Journal
"Appearing in English translation by Anatoly Kudryavitsky, the poems were riveting. I was struck in particular by the poetry of Anna Chromova and Katrina Haddad." Alex Braslavsky, Harvard Ukrainian Summer Institute blog