Love, Love & War
Aharon Shabtai; Peter Cole
New Directions Publishing Corporation (2010)
In Collection
#5026
0*
Poet
Softcover 9780811218900
A rich, far-ranging, powerful selection of a lifetime’swork by the Israeli poet Aharon Shabtai, “one of themost exciting writers working in Hebrew today”(Ha’aretz). He studied Greek and philosophy in Jerusalem, at the Sorbonne and at Cambridge, and he teaches literature in Tel Aviv University. As a poet, he has published some 20 books, and English translations of his poetry have appeared in numerous journals, including the American Poetry Review, the London Review of Books, and Parnassus: Poetry in Review.

His poetic style had varied through the years, spanning between minimalist, warm, romantic poetry ("The Domestic Poem"), through controversial erotic poetry ("Ziva") and to fierce political poetry ("Sun Sun"). Shabtai had often attracted fire from critics on his refusal to stick to a singular writing voice throughout the years, and his stylistic changes have been mockingly referred to as depending on whoever was his wife or significant other at the time.

Shabtai is an outspoken critic of Israeli policies in the Palestinian territories, and of human rights violations against Palestinians. In 2006, he refused to participate in the Eizenberg Shalom International Poetry Festival in Jerusalem, writing that he opposed "an international poetry festival in a city in which the Arab inhabitants are oppressed systematically and cruelly imprisoned between walls, deprived of their rights and living spaces, humiliated in checkpoints and [in which] the international laws are violated." In the summer of 2006 he opposed Israel's bombing raids against Lebanon.

Product Details
LoC Classification PJ5054.S264 .A25 2010
LoC Control Number 2010010440
Dewey 892.4/16
Nationality Israel
Pub Place 1995
No. of Pages 144
Height x Width 9.8 x 5.9  inch
User Defined
Conflict Arab - Isreali Wars
Notes
frequently locating his unflinching work in the war zone and the body

War & Love, Love & War presents a poetic biography of one of Israel's livingliterary masters, an artist whom the National Book Awardwinner C. K. Williamshas called "one of the most exciting poets writing anywhere, and certainly themost audacious." The book moves from shockingly potent political poems tolove lyrics that are as explosive and sometimes bawdy as they are tender; fromearly and stirring inventories of kibbutz life to a radically inventive midrash on(and paean to) the career and character of the Israeli right-wing leader Menachem Begin; from passion for justice to passion for a deeply mourned wife. Atthe end of it all is a prose ars poetica in which Shabtai discusses the methodbehind his marvelous madness. Peter Cole's powerful translation displays thefull and astonishing range of Aharon Shabtai's oeuvre in a single volume for the first time in English.