Djuna Barnes As A Source For Dylan Thomas

2011 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Goodby
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Deirdre David

The last years of Pamela’s life were marked by further illness but also by a remarkable dedication to work. She was hospitalized several times for respiratory illnesses, but in 1974 she published a book of autobiographical essays, Important to Me, which covered such topics as memories of her father, her relationship with Dylan Thomas, her visits to the USSR, and her friendship with other writers such as Edith Sitwell. After months of undiagnosed pain, Snow died in 1980 of a perforated ulcer and Pamela died almost one year later of congestive heart failure and respiratory illness exacerbated by having smoked since the age of fourteen. Yet characteristically she worked courageously until the very end on a novel published posthumously: A Bonfire, which similarly to her first novel deals explicitly with sexual desire. Her ashes were scattered at Stratford-upon-Avon, a place she visited every year on Shakespeare’s birthday.


Tempo ◽  
1955 ◽  
pp. 13-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Keller

Music examples usually illustrate articles, but the present article is no more than an illustration appended to my analytic music example of the complete central song from Strawinsky's most recent composition (Spring, 1954), In Memoriam Dylan Thomas. I think that writers on music should be encouraged to keep to the music, and seriously contend that all the adverse critics of Schoenberg's serial technique, and most of the writers who pass for serial experts, are incapable of a serial analysis and have only the very vaguest notion of what makes a serial piece “tick.” They quote a bar or two—usually from the opening of Schoenberg's 4th Quartet—where the note-row is fairly obvious or, anyway, has previously been uncovered by someone else, and then proceed to let obscure theory take the place of clear if complex practice. The reason is simple: they don't hear the row, and if you are unable to imagine a row aurally, it is very difficult, usually indeed impossible, to trace it throughout a piece. Let me hasten to add that I should not dream of reproaching any critic with his tone-row-deafness if he left it at that: for all we know, he may otherwise be a musical genius. If, however, he professes to talk serial “shop” at the same time, I raise the strongest moral objections.


Author(s):  
Daniela Caselli

This chapter traces a history of Dante’s reception in anglophone literature between the 1870s and the 1950s. It acknowledges his importance in Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, and James Joyce, but engages more closely with Samuel Beckett, Djuna Barnes, and Virginia Woolf. It shows that the modernist Dante that emerges from these authors’ work is both a formal and political one: recruited as an anti-authoritarian voice from the past and seen anew from feminist and queer perspectives, this is not a twenty-first century Dante forced against his will to virtue-signal, however; on the contrary, this is a Dante anachronistically familiar with key ‘vices’ of twentieth-century authors, readers and commentators. Focusing on sullenness, resistance, and fatigue, the chapter argues for a new understanding of modernist experiments with Dante’s political and formal complexity that refuse to use him as a ‘code or a weapon […] to crush someone’, as Dorothy Richardson put it.


1984 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 107
Author(s):  
Kathleen Chase ◽  
Andrew Field ◽  
Djuna Barnes ◽  
Douglos Messerli
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-177
Author(s):  
Miklavž Komelj
Keyword(s):  

Članek poskuša ob nekaterih pesniških zapuščinah dvajsetega stoletja spregovoriti o tisti funkciji rokopisne pisave, v kateri »manus propria« postaja »manus aliena«. S pojavom pisalnega stroja rokopisna pisava ni izgubila svojega pomena, ampak se je pokazala v novi funkciji, ki ni zvedljiva na manualnost, ampak naredi vidne psihične avtomatizme. V članku je posebna pozornost namenjena avtomatski pisavi pri nadrealistih in Fernandu Pessoi. Obenem je konceptualizirana funkcija neberljivosti, ki omogoča, da v območju zapisa vztraja nekaj, kar na ravni besednega pomena ni moglo doseči artikulacije. Če so nadrealisti od avtomatske pisave sprva pričakovali možnost osvoboditve od vezi simbolnega zakona, nas Djuna Barnes v svoji drami Antifona opozori, kako nas roka, ki jo začne od znotraj voditi neka tuja sila, postavi ravno v presečišče vseh napetosti simbolnega. Zadnji del članka je posvečen pozni pesniški zapuščini Djune Barnes, v kateri prav skrajna (a nikoli dokončna) rokopisna elaboracija natipkanih strani tekst prestavlja v nov način obstajanja, ki se upira berljivosti in transkripciji, obenem pa izničuje opozicijo med prisotnostjo in odsotnostjo, na kateri temelji logika označevalca.


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