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Orphic Songs

AUTHOR Lawrence Salomon, Isidore; Campana, Dino
PUBLISHER City Lights Books (01/01/1998)
PRODUCT TYPE Paperback (Paperback)

Description

Dino Campana wrote the unique, visionary masterwork of Italian literature Orphic Songs when he was in his twenties. The originality, rapturous language, and strange beauty of his poetry make him as important to twentieth-century poetry as Garcíiacute;a Lorca or Mayakovsky. Campana was the wild man of Italian poetry in 1914, on the eve of World War I. The war saved some young Italians from rebellion and from Fascism, but not Campana. Always an outsider, he was a vagabond who worked now and then as a gaucho, miner, fireman, organ-grinder, janitor, circus tumbler, horse groomer, and a wandering musician with a Gypsy band. He died in Castel Pulci, a psychiatric hospital, in 1932.

"Dino Campana's small and intensely magical body of poetry from the early years of the last century-prose and free verse that combine the visual and the visionary with astonishing vigor and haunting grace-is little known to English-speaking readers." --Oberlin College Press

Dino Campana (1885-1932) was an Italian lyricist and poet, known for his flamboyant personality. His only collection of poems is found in Orphic Songs. In 1918 he was admitted into a mental hospital and lived the rest of his life there.


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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780872863408
ISBN-10: 0872863409
Binding: Paperback or Softback (Trade Paperback (Us))
Content Language: Italian
More Product Details
Page Count: 183
Carton Quantity: 38
Product Dimensions: 4.87 x 0.47 x 6.30 inches
Weight: 0.35 pound(s)
Feature Codes: Price on Product
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Poetry | European - Italian
Poetry | Subjects & Themes - Places
Poetry | Subjects & Themes - War
Dewey Decimal: 851.912
Library of Congress Control Number: 98009893
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
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Dino Campana wrote the unique, visionary masterwork of Italian literature Orphic Songs when he was in his twenties. The originality, rapturous language, and strange beauty of his poetry make him as important to twentieth-century poetry as Garcíiacute;a Lorca or Mayakovsky. Campana was the wild man of Italian poetry in 1914, on the eve of World War I. The war saved some young Italians from rebellion and from Fascism, but not Campana. Always an outsider, he was a vagabond who worked now and then as a gaucho, miner, fireman, organ-grinder, janitor, circus tumbler, horse groomer, and a wandering musician with a Gypsy band. He died in Castel Pulci, a psychiatric hospital, in 1932.

"Dino Campana's small and intensely magical body of poetry from the early years of the last century-prose and free verse that combine the visual and the visionary with astonishing vigor and haunting grace-is little known to English-speaking readers." --Oberlin College Press

Dino Campana (1885-1932) was an Italian lyricist and poet, known for his flamboyant personality. His only collection of poems is found in Orphic Songs. In 1918 he was admitted into a mental hospital and lived the rest of his life there.


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Paperback