
Randall Jarrell and His Age
Author(s): Stephanie Burt (Author)
- Publisher: Columbia University Press
- Publication Date: 12 Dec. 2002
- Edition: Illustrated
- Language: English
- Print length: 320 pages
- ISBN-10: 0231125941
- ISBN-13: 9780231125949
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
A required source for anyone doing research on the life and work of this noteworthy American poet and critic.–Library Journal
Burt helps us to dig out the shards that constitute Jarrell’s poems and to make them speak of, and speak to, selves and others, in his age and ours.–PN Review
Burt is one of the leading poet-critics of his own emerging generation, turning out an astonishing amount of terrific review-based criticism… His project here is nothing less than the full-scale rehabilitation of Jarrell.–Publishers Weekly, starred review
Jarrell brooded endlessly on the crucial question of how to engage with life, but ultimately the capacity seemed to elude him. Burt traces, rather wonderfully, his obsession with youth, age and aging.–Los Angeles Times Book Review
The achievement of Stephen Burt’s excellent book
Randall Jarrell and His Age, is to show the true subtlty, strangeness, and deep feeling opened up by these apparently unpromising explorations of self and others in the bare style that was Jarrell’s trademark.–Poetry Review Randall Jarrell and His Age is a sophisticated and scholarly treatment of an artist and his metier that will be best appreciated by serious and broadly read specialists.–Chuck Berg “Magill’s Literary Annual “A study impressive for the intensity, detail, and subtlety of its readings…it is likely to be the definitive study of Jarrell for years to come–Edward Brunner “Contemporary Literature “
In his splendid book
Randall Jarrell and His Age Stephen Burt finally answers the question ‘Who was Randall Jarrell?’ by setting his poems within several layers of aesthetic, social, and psychological contexts to not only illuminate the oeuvre but to better understand the complexity of Jarrell’s own intellectual interventions in the cultural climate of America from the late 1930s through his death in 1965.–Jacques Khalip “Boston Review “Stephen Burt does Randall Jarrell the finest kind of critical justice…. There is sympathy here, and imagination, and just the right degree of intellectual detachment.–Louis Menand
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