Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface: Among the Nightmare Lovers of Hades
- 1 Eliot as Revolutionary
- 2 Goethe and Modernism: The Dream of Anachronism in Goethe's Roman Elegies
- 3 Ezra Pound: The Solitary Volcano
- 4 Does Time Exist?
- 5 The Age of Authenticity: An American Poet in England
- 6 Whitman and Wilde in Camden
- 7 Dangerous Thoughts, Puzzling Responses
- 8 Scaling the Wall
- 9 Mass Death and Resurrection: Notes on Contemporary, Mostly American, Jewish Fiction
- 10 Rilke, Einstein, Freud and the Orpheus Mystery
- 11 Shrouds Aplenty (on poems of Janowitz, et al)
- 12 Ambushes of Amazement (on poems of Wakoski)
- 13 Dangerous and Steep (on poems of Jacobsen)
- 14 Small Touching Skill (on poems of Ponsot)
- 15 Language Mesh (on Paul Celan)
- 16 Sweet Extra (on poems of Cuddihy, Ray)
- 17 Maze of the Original (on translating poetry)
- 18 Approaching the Medieval Lyric
- 19 Dark Passage (on poems of Stafford)
- 20 Mistress of Sorrows (on Ingeborg Bachmann)
- 21 The Innocence of a Mirror (on poems of Oliver)
- 22 Peskily Written (on Sade)
- 23 Is There Sex after Sappho?
- 24 Saving One's Skin (on medieval poetry)
- 25 Brilliant White Shadow (on poems and prose of Saba)
- 26 Serpent's Tale (on Minoan archeology)
- 27 How Honest Was Cellini?
- 28 The Poetry of No Compromises (on poems of Rehder)
- 29 Assigning Names (on poems of Nurkse)
- 30 History and Ethics: Bruni's History of Florence
- 31 Virgil's Aeneid Made New (a translation by Robert Fagles)
- 32 Painting with Poetry (on the poems of Annie Boutelle)
- 33 Vampires and Freedom (on the work of Erik Butler)
- 34 How the West Learned to Read and Write: Silent Reading and the Invention of the Sonnet
- List of Publications
- Index
15 - Language Mesh (on Paul Celan)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 April 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface: Among the Nightmare Lovers of Hades
- 1 Eliot as Revolutionary
- 2 Goethe and Modernism: The Dream of Anachronism in Goethe's Roman Elegies
- 3 Ezra Pound: The Solitary Volcano
- 4 Does Time Exist?
- 5 The Age of Authenticity: An American Poet in England
- 6 Whitman and Wilde in Camden
- 7 Dangerous Thoughts, Puzzling Responses
- 8 Scaling the Wall
- 9 Mass Death and Resurrection: Notes on Contemporary, Mostly American, Jewish Fiction
- 10 Rilke, Einstein, Freud and the Orpheus Mystery
- 11 Shrouds Aplenty (on poems of Janowitz, et al)
- 12 Ambushes of Amazement (on poems of Wakoski)
- 13 Dangerous and Steep (on poems of Jacobsen)
- 14 Small Touching Skill (on poems of Ponsot)
- 15 Language Mesh (on Paul Celan)
- 16 Sweet Extra (on poems of Cuddihy, Ray)
- 17 Maze of the Original (on translating poetry)
- 18 Approaching the Medieval Lyric
- 19 Dark Passage (on poems of Stafford)
- 20 Mistress of Sorrows (on Ingeborg Bachmann)
- 21 The Innocence of a Mirror (on poems of Oliver)
- 22 Peskily Written (on Sade)
- 23 Is There Sex after Sappho?
- 24 Saving One's Skin (on medieval poetry)
- 25 Brilliant White Shadow (on poems and prose of Saba)
- 26 Serpent's Tale (on Minoan archeology)
- 27 How Honest Was Cellini?
- 28 The Poetry of No Compromises (on poems of Rehder)
- 29 Assigning Names (on poems of Nurkse)
- 30 History and Ethics: Bruni's History of Florence
- 31 Virgil's Aeneid Made New (a translation by Robert Fagles)
- 32 Painting with Poetry (on the poems of Annie Boutelle)
- 33 Vampires and Freedom (on the work of Erik Butler)
- 34 How the West Learned to Read and Write: Silent Reading and the Invention of the Sonnet
- List of Publications
- Index
Summary
Paul Celan's poetry presents an exquisite imagination wrapped in an unspeakable pain. The pain is literally unspeakable. That is Celan's theme. The language, whether Celan's German or a translator's English, is inadequate to the pain. To express it approximately, he must pummel and reconstitute grammar, combine and recombine words, often eliminate information and facts and allow ordinary acts and objects to assume extraordinary dimensions, as symbols of the most enormous and ineffable excruciation.
The challenge of this sort of problem— of making poetry from terror, horror and speechlessness— and Celan's often interesting solutions to it, his exquisite phrases, are a source of his recent posthumous celebrity. His obviously tormented life is another source, though one that, to judge from Michael Hamburger's introduction to this volume of translations, Celan himself would have dismissed. Celan saw himself, according to Hamburger, as aspiring to write “pure” poetry, along with a great many other poets in France after Mallarmé. “Pure” poetry, even in the dismal shadow of the Second World War, in the Paris of the early fifties, was not viewed as unfriendly to political and social issues. The terrors of the concentration camp, the horror of a mother shot to death, genocide and the death of a young son were not incompatible with writing a poetry that could simultaneously respond to these events and stand on its own as poetry, that would be something more than an outraged letter to a friend or a tortured entry in a diary. The enduring question is whether and how well Celan succeeded.
His very life seems to have been a kind of surrealistic roller coaster, with many details, especially of the final years (he committed suicide in 1970), apparently not yet made public. He was born in Czernowitz, in Bukovina, in 1920, as Paul Antschel. His name changes— first to Ancel, then to Celan, an anagram adopted after the publication of his first poems in Romania in 1947— may or may not offer clues to what often seems a chameleon existence and a chameleon art. Adaptations of the life and of the work, a constant restructuring, took place against a background of violence and changes of nationality and language.
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- Information
- Poetry and FreedomDiscoveries in Aesthetics, 1985–2018, pp. 113 - 116Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2020