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Toptitel von Gabriela Mistral

Selected Poems of Gabriela Mistral



Gebundenes Buch
The first Nobel Prize in literature to be awarded to a Latin American writer went to the Chilean poet Gabriela Mistral. Famous and beloved during her lifetime all over Latin America and in Europe, Mistral has never been known in North America as she deserves to be. The reputation of her more flamboyant and accessible friend and countryman Pablo Neruda has overshadowed hers, and she has been officially sentimentalised into a 'poetess' of children and motherhood. Translations, and even selections of her work in Spanish, have tended to underplay the darkness, the strangeness, and the raging intensity of her poems of grief and pain, the yearning power of her evocations of the Chilean landscape, the stark music of her Round Dances, the visionary splendour of her Hymns of America. During her lifetime Mistral published four books: Desolation, Tenderness, Clearcut, and Winepress. These are included in the 'Complete' Nobel edition published in Madrid; the Poem of Chile, her last book, was printed years after her death. Le Guin includes poems from all five books in this volume, with particular emphasis on the later work. The intelligence and passion of Le Guin's selection and translation will finally allow people in the North to hear the originality, power, purity, and intransigence of this great American voice.…mehr

 

26,99 €

This America of Ours



Broschiertes Buch
2005 - Best Book Translation Prize - New England Council of Latin American Studies Gabriela Mistral and Victoria Ocampo were the two most influential and respected women writers of twentieth-century Latin America. Mistral, a plain, self-educated Chilean woman of the mountains who was a poet, journalist, and educator, became Latin America's first Nobel Laureate in 1945. Ocampo, a stunning Argentine woman of wealth, wrote hundreds of essays and founded the first-rate literary journal Sur. Though of very different backgrounds, their deep commitment to what they felt was "their" America forged a unique intellectual and emotional bond between them. This collection of the previously unpublished correspondence between Mistral and Ocampo reveals the private side of two very public women. In these letters (as well as in essays that are included in an appendix), we see what Mistral and Ocampo thought about each other and about the intellectual and political atmosphere of their time (including the Spanish Civil War, World War II, and the dictatorships of Latin America) and particularly how they negotiated the complex issues of identity, nationality, and gender within their wide-ranging cultural connections to both the Americas and Europe.…mehr

 

39,99 €

Gabriela Mistral

Gabriela Mistral (* Vicuña 1889, † Hempstead 1957) - unter diesem Pseudonym veröffentlichte die chilenische Dichterin und Katholikin Lucila Godoy y Alcayaga ihre Werke - eine Hommage an ihre Vorbilder Frédéric Mistral und Gabriele d'Annunzio. In den Anden geboren, lernte Mistral schon früh die Widrigkeiten des Lebens kennen, als der Vater die Familie verlässt. Gabriela Mistral unterstützte die Mutter mit dem Geld, das sie als Hilfslehrerin verdient. Ihre Erschütterung durch den Selbstmord ihres Geliebten verarbeitet Mistral in den "Sonetten des Todes" (1914), die später auch in dem Gedichtband "Trostlosigkeit" (1922) veröffentlicht werden. Die Liebe und der Tod und die Beschäftigung damit sollten die Dichterin, Lehrerin und spätere Diplomatin Gabriela Mistral immer begleiten - im Leben und in ihren Werken, u. a. den Gedichtbänden "Zärtlichkeit" (1924) oder "Holzschlag" (1939). So nehmen sich das befreundete Ehepaar Zweig, der Schriftsteller Stefan Zweig und dessen Frau Lotte, das Leben, später auch Mistrals Adoptivsohn. Mistrals diplomatische Karriere begann 1933 und führte sie u. a. nach Spanien, Brasilien und in die USA. Dort, in New York, starb sie - zuletzt schwer krebskrank. Den Nobelpreis für Literatur erhielt Gabriela Mistral 1945.