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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Charlie Louth (Fellow and Tutor in German, The Queen's College, The University of Oxford)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 4.00cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 1.094kg ISBN: 9780198813231ISBN 10: 0198813236 Pages: 656 Publication Date: 24 June 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents1: Rilke's Openings 2: Beginnings 3: Das Buch der Bilder and Das Stunden-Buch 4: Neue Gedichte 5: Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge 6: Rilke's Requiems 7: The Interim I: 1907-1914 8: The Interim II: 1914-1922 9: Duineser Elegien 10: Die Sonette an Orpheus 11: Tender Taxes and Other DeparturesReviewsIn his poem 'In Memory of W. B. Yeats', W. H. Auden famously wrote that 'poetry makes nothing happen'. In Rilke something emphatically does happen, as Charlie Louth demonstrates with this subtle and comprehensive new reading of his work. * Philip Ward, Cambridge, UK, Austrian Studies * Louth provides the most comprehensive, and also the most careful, account available in any language of the breadth of Rilke's writing. ...The book's usefulness and pleasure as an extended commentary on Rilke's work [is] held together above all by Louth's alert, thoughtful and always unshowy voice as a critic. * Ian Cooper, Modern Language Review * To come to Rilke's poems in Charlie Louth's company is to learn to read. With freshness and intelligence, he approaches them as if he were their first reader... The result is a definitive work that should not be missing from any Rilke library. A translation into German would be very welcome. * Jeremy Adler, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung [translated from the original article to English] * The readings are very fine, combining patient attention with ... tact, a light touch that allows the poetry to breathe. * Michael Minden, Journal of European Studies * With his almost Empsonian purchase on syntax and sensibility, Louth's study will be indispensable for anyone with a serious interest in this most mysterious and masterly of poets. * Ben Hutchenson, Times Literary Supplement * ...a commanding monograph, one of the most insightful books about Rilke in recent years...One of the merits of Louth's book is the way he weaves together Rilke's biography with his poetry and incorporates rarely used evidence from Rilke's letters to illustrate the unity of life and work...Charlie Louth has written a definitive book that shouldn't be missing in any Rilke library. * Jeremy Adler, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung [translated from the original article to English] * Rilke: the Life of the Work is comprehensive, erudite, always clear... * Martyn Crucefix, Agenda * This book has many outstanding merits and virtues...but its greatest merit is that it exists. Only a miracle of dedication on the part of its author could have produced it. * Michael Minden, Journal of European Studies * ...a commanding monograph, one of the most insightful books about Rilke in recent years...One of the merits of Louth's book is the way he weaves together Rilke's biography with his poetry and incorporates rarely used evidence from Rilke's letters to illustrate the unity of life and work...Charlie Louth has written a definitive book that shouldn't be missing in any Rilke library. * Jeremy Adler, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung [translated from the original article to English] * Rilke: the Life of the Work is comprehensive, erudite, always clear... * Martyn Crucefix, Agenda * This book has many outstanding merits and virtues...but its greatest merit is that it exists. Only a miracle of dedication on the part of its author could have produced it. * Michael Minden, Journal of European Studies * In his poem 'In Memory of W. B. Yeats', W. H. Auden famously wrote that 'poetry makes nothing happen'. In Rilke something emphatically does happen, as Charlie Louth demonstrates with this subtle and comprehensive new reading of his work. * Philip Ward, Cambridge, UK, Austrian Studies * Louth provides the most comprehensive, and also the most careful, account available in any language of the breadth of Rilke's writing. ...The book's usefulness and pleasure as an extended commentary on Rilke's work [is] held together above all by Louth's alert, thoughtful and always unshowy voice as a critic. * Ian Cooper, Modern Language Review * To come to Rilke's poems in Charlie Louth's company is to learn to read. With freshness and intelligence, he approaches them as if he were their first reader... The result is a definitive work that should not be missing from any Rilke library. A translation into German would be very welcome. * Jeremy Adler, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung [translated from the original article to English] * The readings are very fine, combining patient attention with ... tact, a light touch that allows the poetry to breathe. * Michael Minden, Journal of European Studies * With his almost Empsonian purchase on syntax and sensibility, Louth's study will be indispensable for anyone with a serious interest in this most mysterious and masterly of poets. * Ben Hutchenson, Times Literary Supplement * ...a commanding monograph, one of the most insightful books about Rilke in recent years...One of the merits of Louth's book is the way he weaves together Rilke's biography with his poetry and incorporates rarely used evidence from Rilke's letters to illustrate the unity of life and work...Charlie Louth has written a definitive book that shouldn't be missing in any Rilke library. * Jeremy Adler, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung [translated from the original article to English] * Rilke: the Life of the Work is comprehensive, erudite, always clear... * Martyn Crucefix, Agenda * This book has many outstanding merits and virtues...but its greatest merit is that it exists. Only a miracle of dedication on the part of its author could have produced it. * Michael Minden, Journal of European Studies * The theme of Louth's book is nothing less than Rilke's 'work' itself, more precisely what it means to see his work as having a 'life'...One of the great strengths of Louth's study is the way it opens up thematic patterns within a chronological framework. It shows the life of the work in its overall extension and development, but also shows it gathering preoccupations and dwelling in them-as lives do. * Ian Cooper, Modern Language Review * This book has many outstanding merits and virtues...but its greatest merit is that it exists. Only a miracle of dedication on the part of its author could have produced it. * Michael Minden, Journal of European Studies * Rilke: the Life of the Work is comprehensive, erudite, always clear... * Martyn Crucefix, Agenda * ...a commanding monograph, one of the most insightful books about Rilke in recent years...One of the merits of Louth's book is the way he weaves together Rilke's biography with his poetry and incorporates rarely used evidence from Rilke's letters to illustrate the unity of life and work...Charlie Louth has written a definitive book that shouldn't be missing in any Rilke library. * Jeremy Adler, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung [translated from the original article to English] * Author InformationCharlie Louth is Fellow and Tutor in German at The Queen's College, University of Oxford. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |