On Grief and Reason collects the essays that Joseph Brodsky wrote between his reception of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1987 and his death in January 1996. The volume includes Brodsky's Nobel lecture; essays on the condition of exile, the nature of history, the art of reading, and the notion of the poet as an inveterate Don Giovanni; his Immodest Proposal for the future of poetry, written when he was serving as Poet Laureate of the United States; a consideration of the poetry of Robert Frost; his searching estimations of Hardy, Horace, and Rilke; an affecting memoir of Stephen Spender; and a moving meditation on the figure of Marcus Aureilus. The essays, composed in Brodskys distinctive, idiomatic English, are inventive and alive. The Nobel laureate, himself branded a pseudo-poet in velveteen trousers by Soviet authorities and expelled from his home country in 1972, writes boldly of the poets place in society: By failing to read or listen to poets, a society dooms itself to inferior modes of articulationof the politician, or the salesman, or the charlatanin short, to its own. It forfeits . . . its own evolutionary potential . . . This edition, reissued on the occasion of the late authors eightieth birthday, prompts the reader to consider Brodskys words with renewed contemplation of the current state of literature and the society in which we read it.
- | Author: Joseph Brodsky
- | Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
- | Publication Date: May 12, 2020
- | Number of Pages: 496 pages
- | Language: English
- | Binding: Paperback
- | ISBN-10: 0374539065
- | ISBN-13: 9780374539061