An aloe - spiky, soothing, fragrant, bitter - opens Diana Bridge's new collection of poetry. Aloe is structured in four parts: 'The compulsion to catch it', 'Into words', 'Among the Freuds' and 'It's their century'. The first section looks outwards to the natural world, opening with a stunning set of tree poems that begin with close observation and move on to contemplate loss, hesitancy, generation and repetition (repeat, diversify, diversify, repeat). The second section explores how words affect everyday life and how everyday life may be turned into words. Other voices and stories are used to convey psychological and physical suffering in 'Among the Freuds' - the furies, Penelope, Sylvia Plath and Medea all appear. The final section, 'It's their century', returns to the Chinese and Indian source material that Bridge has mined with such success in the past. Using various touchstones - an enduring classical poem, a superb Chinese pot and the architectural and sculptural records of India - she explores ideas of juncture and conjunction, meeting places between West and East. Aloe is a fine new collection by a rigorous and perceptive poet.
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An aloe - spiky, soothing, fragrant, bitter. Using various touchstones - an enduring classical poem, a superb Chinese pot and the architectural and sculptural records of India - Diana Bridge explores ideas of juncture and conjunction, meeting places between West and East. Aloe is a fine new collection by a rigorous and perceptive poet.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781869404413
Publisert
1900
Utgiver
Vendor
Auckland University Press
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
72

Forfatter

Biographical note

Diana Bridge was educated at Victoria University of Wellington with further study at the School of Oriental Studies, London, and at the University of Auckland (where she was a Senior Scholar awarded the Rewi Alley Scholarship). Her PhD in Chinese Literature is from the Australian National University, Canberra. Diana burst into print, a fully formed and technically superb poet, later in life than most. Her poems have appeared in many literary journals and she has published three critically acclaimed collections of poetry, Landscape with Lines (AUP, 1996); The Girls on the Wall (AUP, 1999) and Porcelain (AUP, 2001).