New York Trilogy
Autor Peter Balakianen Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 oct 2025
In an inventive, elliptical language, New York Trilogy explores one man’s journey from the late 1960s to the twenty-first century, as he moves through a series of experiences centered in New York City and the surrounding New Jersey Palisades. Throughout this long poem in three parts, the protagonist’s life is impacted by historical events including the Armenian Genocide, the bombing of Hiroshima, the Vietnam War, the AIDS epidemic, the attacks of September 11th, the US war in Iraq, and the climate crisis.
Comprised of three multi-sequence poems originally included in Peter Balakian’s collections No Sign, Ozone Journal, and Ziggurat, the sections of New York Trilogy come together to form a poetry that embraces interior and aesthetic experiences, celebrates human intimacy, and bears witness to history. The historical power and psychological depth of Balakian’s work expands on the tradition of the American long poem with a lyrical narrative that weaves intimate personal moments into the vastness of shared history.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780226843742
ISBN-10: 0226843742
Pagini: 104
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.16 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 0226843742
Pagini: 104
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.16 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
Peter Balakian is the author of nine books of poems including the Pulitzer Prize–winning Ozone Journal. His memoir Black Dog of Fate won the PEN/Albrand Award, and The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response was a New York Times bestseller. Balakian’s work has been translated into many languages, and he teaches at Colgate University.
Cuprins
Author’s Note
One. A-Train / Ziggurat / Elegy
Two. Ozone Journal
Three. No Sign
Notes on the Text
One. A-Train / Ziggurat / Elegy
Two. Ozone Journal
Three. No Sign
Notes on the Text
Recenzii
"New York Trilogy reads as the culmination of [Balakian's] life-long concern with how poetry can address—honestly, but with that complexity and beauty unique to poetry—the twin poles of human atrocity and cultural achievement; of planetary extinction and possibility. . . . Montage, fragmentation, the juggling of multiple time frames and sources, as well as variations in verse form, diction, and pacing make for some challenging reading. But ultimately, I found the book tremendously moving in its search for clarity in a life lived in full awareness of the present moment—with all its historical, cultural, geographical, and political context still attached. . . . What results is a dynamic, disturbing account of human achievement colliding periodically with the 'chthonic zigzag of hubris'. Excavation, building, and collapse recur throughout, sources of both beauty and horror. Balakian’s diction sometimes veers into technical, numerical, even algebraic language."
"[A] single personal epic. . . . Balakian, like many in his generation of 'witness' poets (Carolyn Forché, Lawrence Joseph), splits the difference between poetry’s compression and journalism’s immediacy . . . The operational mode is the collage, a series of images and phrases, akin to montage in film; the language, we might say, is 'clipped.' And as in journalism, the poet reports with little editorializing, letting the images speak for themselves."
“Rippling with large energy, ambitious in its reach, and gratifying in its etched-in personal glimpses, New York Trilogy shuttles us through history, from a dig in Mesopotamia to the catastrophes of our time. Ingesting calamity, it breaks the language into fresh syncopations. So idioms change and advance. The Trilogy is a feat of contemporary witness, its multiple refractions brought to account in the self of the poet. This is how we integrate fragmentation in our time, and how, after hard passage, we look to transcend.”