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Ur-Marka

by Joseph Brodsky
language: spanish, basque
Publisher: Katakrak, June of 2022 ‧
15,29€
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«Oso lasai zegoen dena. Noizbehinka ontzi urri argiztatu gutxi batzuk igarotzen ziren, ontziek beren helizeekin asaldatzen zuten CINZANO neoi handi baten isla, ur azaleko olio geruza beltzean berriro finkatzen saiatzen zena. Hori lortu baino askoz lehenago isiltasuna itzuliko zen».Joseph Brodsky, Ur-marka«Egia da Veneziarekin zerikusia zuten liburu asko irakurriak nituela, baina Brodskyrena bestelakoa zen, oso bestelakoa; ez, noski, gida liburu bat, ez turistak bisitatzen ez dituzten leku bereziak bisitatzea gomendatzen duen horietakoa, ezta bidaia liburua ere. Zalantza egiten dut Venezia bera den liburu honen gai nagusia; Venezia aitzakiatzat harturik, Brodsky, denborari buruz eta urari buruz (sinonimoak berarentzat, azken buruan) hausnarketan aritzean, saiatzen da azaltzen nola denbora eta ura gauzatu diren Venezia deituriko leku batean, edo nola Venezian denbora bera ikusgai bilakatu den, begiratu ahal dugun fenomenoa. Denbora aipatzen denean, iragana, oraina eta geroa datoz, bizitza eta heriotza, arbasoek utzitakoa eta gure huskeria, gure ezereza. Agian begirada da liburu honen gai nagusia, Venezia begiaren paradisua baita Brodskyren ustez».Rikardo Arregi Diaz de Heredia, hitzatzean«Poeta Veneziara egindako lehen bidaian, 1972an, idatzitako Laguna izeneko olerkian dagoeneko agertzen dira, garatu gabe, edo senaz iragarrita, ia hogei urte beranduago Ur-markak saiakera honetan jorratuko diren hainbat irudi eta intuizio. Gauza bera gertatzen da 1982ko Veneziar ahapaldiak poema parearekin. Batek irudipena izan dezake hiriak poetarengan utzitako lehen zirrara haiek baieztatu eta haietan sakontzeko saiakerak baino ez direla hurrengo bisita guztiak, bere buruari (edo bere irakurleei) guztiz argitu arte metafora bakoitzaren atzean zer ezkutatzen den».Angel Erro, hitzatzean

Ur-Marka

by Joseph Brodsky

Property Description
ISBN: 9788416946679
Publisher: Katakrak
Release Date: June of 2022
Language: Spanish, Basque
Dimensions: 150 x 230 x 23 mm
Cover: Softcover
Pages: 176
Format: Book
Categories: Books in Spanish > Fiction > Romance
EAN: 9788416946679

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Joseph Brodsky

Nobel Prize in Literature 1987

American poet Josip Aleksanderovich Brodsky was born on May 25, 1940, in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg), in the former Soviet Union. The son of a photographer, he abandoned his studies at the age of fifteen, revealing himself to be a rebellious and discontented young man. He then went through various professional situations, even working as a boiler stoker and geological prospector. He began writing poetry before he turned twenty. Although his works did not directly criticize the Soviet regime, they fell out of favor with the authorities, and therefore had to appear in clandestine pamphlet publications. However, he published his first book in 1963, a compilation of poems entitled Bolshaja Elegija Dzonu Donnu.
In March 1964, after being tried for "social parasitism," Brodsky served a sentence of exile with forced labor. Initially sentenced to five years, his sentence was commuted to two, thanks to petitions from prominent figures in the Russian cultural scene, such as Anna Akhmatova and Dmitri Shostakovich. During his stay in Archangel prison, he managed to send the manuscript of... Stikhotvoreniya i Poemi to friends who took it upon themselves to have it published through an American publisher in 1965.
In 1972 he was banned from the Soviet Union and, after passing through Austria and England, decided to emigrate to the United States of America. There he held teaching positions at several universities. In 1977 he adopted American citizenship.
Choosing English as his working language, he published, among other works, A Part Of Speech (1980), History Of The Twentieth Century (1986) and Less than one (1986). This last one, a collection of essays that appeared in periodicals with which Brodsky had collaborated, dealt with artistic and political themes. In one of them, the writer revolts against the fact that the Soviet authorities never gave his parents permission to visit him. In 1995, a new work emerged. In Grief and Reason, a compilation of essays in which Brodsky analyzes the rivalries between the Soviets and the Americans.
Awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1987, Joseph Brodsky died in New York on January 28, 1996, from a heart attack.

Joseph Brodsky. In Infopédia. Porto: Porto Editora, 2003-2011.

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