Skip to main content

Open Papers

-
This volume includes the prose writings of Odysseas Elytis (1946–1974): First and Foremost, Poetry The True Character and Lyrical Audacity of Andreas Kalvos Art, Chance, Audacity The girls Dreams The painter Theophilos The chronicle of a decade [preface] The texts: The dangers of half-knowledge A letter on surrealism A letter on contemporary art Poetic intelligence Meaning and sequence in our new poetry Contemporary poetic and artistic problems Review and a new beginning EPILOGUE: A: The illustrations of General Makrygiannis and the folk artist Panagiotis Zografos Contemporary Greek art and the painter N. Hatzikyriakos-Gikas Yannis Tsarouchis The wedding canopies of Yannis Moralis The sea stones of Nikolaos The sculptor Christos Kapralos The Fasians we love B: Equivalences in Picasso Karolos Koun and his era John Veltri C: Arthur Rimbaud Lautréamont Paul Éluard Pierre-Jean Jouve Federico García Lorca Giuseppe Ungaretti Pierre Reverdy between Greece and Solesmes
  • Author Odysseas Elytis
  • Pages: 667
  • ISBN: 978-960-7233-97-4
  • Publication: 1982
  • Dimensions: 25 x 16
  • Categories: Books, Essays & Thought, Δοκίμιο

"Undoubtedly, if there is one Greek poet inextricably linked with the Greek summer and its romantic connotations, it is Odysseas Elytis. It is not our place here to examine the extent to which this association limits the poet’s work—at least for a wide range of readers—but it is a good opportunity to highlight a lesser-known aspect of his work, one that is equally summery, equally erotic and inherently poetic. The essay ‘The Girls’, the most erotic of those included in _Open Papers_, constitutes a poetry behind Elytis’s poetry, with interpretations, renditions, first-person confessions, written in two periods [1944 and 1972] through which poetry springs forth as a deeply erotic act at the very moment that love emerges, as a poetic inhabiting of the world."

– Efi Katsourou, The Reader

Odysseas Elytis

Odysseas Elytis was born in Heraklion, Crete, on 2 November 1911. He lived in Athens, where his family settled in 1914. His origins in Lesbos, his birth in Crete, and the summers of his childhood spent in Spetses and the Cyclades shaped a profoundly insular consciousness, which later, when it intersected with surrealism, gave rise to an original poetry, brimming with a multitude of lyrical images, yet also imbued with revolutionary forces. A poetry centred on light that sought to decipher the mystery of existence. After finishing secondary school in Athens, he studied law, whilst serving as a second lieutenant in the Albanian War. He lived in Paris on two occasions (1948–1951 and 1969–1971), where he studied literature at the Sorbonne and came into contact with the leading poets and painters of the twentieth century. In 1979, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. He lived until the end of his life (18 March 1996) devoted to poetry. WORKS: Orientations (1940),The First Sun (1943), Heroic and Lamenting Song for the Lost Second Lieutenant of Albania (1945), Axion Esti (1959), Six and One Remorse for the Sky (1960),The Tree of Light and the Fourteenth Beauty (1971), The Sun, the Sun-bearer (1971), The Monogram (1971), The Rows of Love (1972), The Painter Theophilos (1973),Open Cards (1974), The Half-Siblings (1974), Second Writing (1976), The Magic of Papadiamantis (1976), Sematologion (1977), Maria Nefeli (1978),A Tribute to Andreas Embeirikos (1978), Three Poems with a Flag of Convenience (1982), Diary of an Unseen April (1984), Sappho (1984), The Revelation of John (1985),The Little Nautilus (1985), Krinagoras (1987), The Public and the Private (1990), Private Road (1990), The Elegies of Oxopetra (1991), In White (1992),West of Sorrow (1995), The Garden of Delusions (1995), 2 x 7 e (1996), From Up Close (1998), Self-Portrait in Spoken Word (2000), Poetry (2002).

NEWSLETTER

Open Papers

Ref. 978-960-7233-97-4

Details

Shipping & Returns