Description
Book SynopsisAn Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library.Twilight of the Avant-Garde: Spanish Poetry 1980-2000 addresses the central problem of contemporary Spanish poetry: the attempt to preserve the scope and ambitiousness of modernist poetry at the end of the twentieth century. Jonathan Mayhew first offers a critical analysis of the called 'poetry of experience' of Luis García Montero, a tendency that is based on the supposed obsolescence of the modernist poetics of the first half of the century. While the 'poetry of experience' presents itself as a progressive attempt to 'normalise' poetry, to make it accessible to the common reader, Mayhew views it as a reactionary move that ultimately reduces poetry to the status of a minor genre. The author then turns his attention to the poetry of José Angel Valente and Antonio Gamoneda, whose poetry embodies the continuation of modernism, and to the work of younger women poets of the last two decades of the twentieth century. Throughout this controversial and provocative book, Mayhew challenges received notions about the value of poetic language in relation to the larger culture and society. It turns out that the cultural ambition of modernist poetics is still highly relevant even in an age in which more cynical views of literature seem prevalent. Ultimately, Mayhew writes as an advocate for the survival of more challenging and ambitious modes of poetic writing in the postmodern age.
Trade ReviewMayhew is a critic who is at the top of his game; he combines a breadth of knowledge of the field with acute analysis.
John C. WilcoxThe new book by Jonathan Mayhew brings together a joint trials stimulant, both about poets that have marked the evolution of the last poetry in Spain as on figures still little addressed by critics. His rigorous approach, although not without controversy, as shaky grounds as of the last Spanish poetry, is worthy of consideration in an area where still scarce studies that offer a comparative perspective on the different poetic in force.
Mario Martin Gijon, Revista de Literature, July-December, Vol. LXXIII, No. 146
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Part One: The Avant-Garde and its Discontents: The Place of Poetry in Contemporary Spanish Culture
- 1. Aesthetic Conservatism in Recent Spanish Poetry
- 2. Three Apologies for Poetry
- 3. Poetry, Politics, and Power Part Two: Valente, Gamoneda, and the “Generation of the 1950s”
- 4. In Search of Ordinary Language: Revisiting the “Generation of the 1950s”
- 5. José Ángel Valente’s Lectura de Paul Celan: Translation and the Heideggerian Tradition in Spain
- 6. Antonio Gamoneda’s Libro de los venenos: The Limits of Genre Part Three: Women Poets of the 1980s and 1990s
- 7. Gender Under Erasure (Amparo Amorós, Luisa Castro)
- 8. Desire Deferred: Ana Rossetti’s Punto umbrío
- 9. Concha García: The End of Epiphany
- 10. Lola Velasco’s El movimiento de las flores and the Limits of Criticism
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index