Words for War
New Poems from Ukraine
Herausgeber: Rosochinsky, Max; Maksymchuk, Oksana
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Words for War
New Poems from Ukraine
Herausgeber: Rosochinsky, Max; Maksymchuk, Oksana
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The armed conflict in Ukraine brought about an emergence of a distinctive trend in contemporary Ukrainian poetry: the poetry of war. The poems collected in this volume engage with the events and experiences of war, reflecting on the themes of alienation, loss, and disability; as well as justice, heroism, courage, resilience, and forgiveness.
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The armed conflict in Ukraine brought about an emergence of a distinctive trend in contemporary Ukrainian poetry: the poetry of war. The poems collected in this volume engage with the events and experiences of war, reflecting on the themes of alienation, loss, and disability; as well as justice, heroism, courage, resilience, and forgiveness.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Ukrainian Studies
- Verlag: Academic Studies Press
- Seitenzahl: 242
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Dezember 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 228mm x 153mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 430g
- ISBN-13: 9781618118615
- ISBN-10: 1618118617
- Artikelnr.: 52414883
- Ukrainian Studies
- Verlag: Academic Studies Press
- Seitenzahl: 242
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Dezember 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 228mm x 153mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 430g
- ISBN-13: 9781618118615
- ISBN-10: 1618118617
- Artikelnr.: 52414883
Oksana Maksymchuk is an author of two award-winning books of poetry in the Ukrainian language, and a recipient of Richmond Lattimore and Joseph Brodsky-Stephen Spender translation prizes. She works on problems of cognition and motivation in Plato's moral psychology. Maksymchuk teaches philosophy at the University of Arkansas. Max Rosochinsky is a poet and translator from Simferopol, Crimea. His poems had been nominated for the PEN International New Voices Award in 2015. With Maksymchuk, he won first place in the 2014 Brodsky-Spender competition. His academic work focuses on twentieth century Russian poetry, especially Osip Mandelshtam and Marina Tsvetaeva.
Preface Oksana Maksymchuk and Max Rosochinsky Introduction: "Barometers"
Ilya Kaminsky ANASTASIA AFANASIEVA she says we don't have the right kind of
basement in our building You whose inner void from Cold She Speaks On TV
the news showed from The Plain Sense of Things Untitled Can there be poetry
after VASYL HOLOBORODKO No Return I Fly Away in the Shape of a Dandelion
Seed The Dragon Hillforts I Pick up my Footprints BORYS HUMENYUK Our
platoon commander is a strange fellow These seagulls over the battlefield
When HAIL rocket launchers are firing Not a poem in forty days An old
mulberry tree near Mariupol When you clean your weapon A Testament YURI
IZDRYK Darkness Invisible Make Love ALEKSANDR KABANOV This is a post on
Facebook, and this, a block post in the East How I love - out of harm's way
A Former Dictator He came first wearing a t-shirt inscribed "Je suis
Christ" In the garden of Gethsemane on the Dnieper river A Russian tourist
is on vacation Fear is a form of the good Once upon a time, a Jew says to
his prisoner, his Hellenic foe KATERYNA KALYTKO They won't compose any
songs, because the children of their children April 6 This loneliness could
have a name, an Esther or a Miriam Home is still possible there, where they
hang laundry out to dry He Writes Can great things happen to ordinary
people? LYUDMYLA KHERSONSKA Did you know that if you hide under a blanket
and pull it over your head How to describe a human other than he's alone
The whole soldier doesn't suffer A country in the shape of a puddle, on the
map Buried in a human neck, a bullet looks like a eye, sewn in that's it:
you yourself choose how you live I planted a camellia in the yard One
night, a humanitarian convoy arrived in her dream When a country of -
overall - nice people Leave me alone, I'm crying. I'm crying, let me be the
enemy never ends every seventh child of ten - he's a shame you really don't
remember Grandpa - but let's say you do BORIS KHERSONSKY explosions are the
new normal, you grow used to them all for the battlefront which doesn't
really exist people carry explosives around the city way too long the
artillery and the tanks stayed silent in their hangars when wars are over
we just collapse modern warfare is too large for the streets my brother
brought war to our crippled home Bessarabia, Galicia, 1913-1939
Pronouncements MARIANNA KIYANOVSKA I believed before in a tent like in a
nest we swallowed an air like earth I wake up, sigh, and head off to war
The eye, a bulb that maps its own bed Their tissue is coarse, like veins in
a petal Things swell closed. It's delicious to feel how fully Naked agony
begets a poison of poisons HALYNA KRUK A Woman Named Hope like a blood
clot, something catches him in the rye someone stands between you and death
like a bullet, the Lord saves those who save themselves OKSANA LUTSYSHYNA
eastern europe is a pit of death and decaying plums don't touch live flesh
he asks - don't help me I Dream of Explosions VASYL MAKHNO February Elegy
War Generation On War On Apollinaire MARJANA SAVKA We wrote poems Forgive
me, darling, I'm not a fighter january pulled him apart OSTAP SLYVYNSKY
Lovers on a Bicycle Lieutenant Alina 1918 Kicking the Ball in the Dark
Story (2) Latifa A Scene from 2014 Orpheus LYUBA YAKIMCHUK Died of Old Age
How I Killed Caterpillar Decomposition He Says Everything Will Be Fine
Eyebrows Funeral Services Crow, Wheels Knife SERHIY ZHADAN from Stones "We
speak of the cities we lived in . . ." "Now we remember: janitors and the
night-sellers of bread . . ." from Why I'm not on Social Media Needle
Headphones Sect Rhinoceros They buried him last winter Three Years Now
We've Been Talking about the War "A guy I know volunteered . . ." "Three
years now we've been talking about the war . . ." "So that's what their
family is like now . . ." "Sun, terrace, lots of green . . ." "The street.
A woman zigzags the street . . ." "Village street - gas line's broken . .
." "At least now, my friend says . . ." Thirty-Two Days Without Alcohol
Take Only What Is Most Important A city where she ended up hiding
Afterword: "On Decomposition and Rotten Plums: Language of War in
Contemporary Ukrainian Poetry" Polina Barskova Authors Translators Glossary
Geographical Locations and Places of Significance Notes to Poems
Acknowledgements Acknowledgement of Prior Publications
Ilya Kaminsky ANASTASIA AFANASIEVA she says we don't have the right kind of
basement in our building You whose inner void from Cold She Speaks On TV
the news showed from The Plain Sense of Things Untitled Can there be poetry
after VASYL HOLOBORODKO No Return I Fly Away in the Shape of a Dandelion
Seed The Dragon Hillforts I Pick up my Footprints BORYS HUMENYUK Our
platoon commander is a strange fellow These seagulls over the battlefield
When HAIL rocket launchers are firing Not a poem in forty days An old
mulberry tree near Mariupol When you clean your weapon A Testament YURI
IZDRYK Darkness Invisible Make Love ALEKSANDR KABANOV This is a post on
Facebook, and this, a block post in the East How I love - out of harm's way
A Former Dictator He came first wearing a t-shirt inscribed "Je suis
Christ" In the garden of Gethsemane on the Dnieper river A Russian tourist
is on vacation Fear is a form of the good Once upon a time, a Jew says to
his prisoner, his Hellenic foe KATERYNA KALYTKO They won't compose any
songs, because the children of their children April 6 This loneliness could
have a name, an Esther or a Miriam Home is still possible there, where they
hang laundry out to dry He Writes Can great things happen to ordinary
people? LYUDMYLA KHERSONSKA Did you know that if you hide under a blanket
and pull it over your head How to describe a human other than he's alone
The whole soldier doesn't suffer A country in the shape of a puddle, on the
map Buried in a human neck, a bullet looks like a eye, sewn in that's it:
you yourself choose how you live I planted a camellia in the yard One
night, a humanitarian convoy arrived in her dream When a country of -
overall - nice people Leave me alone, I'm crying. I'm crying, let me be the
enemy never ends every seventh child of ten - he's a shame you really don't
remember Grandpa - but let's say you do BORIS KHERSONSKY explosions are the
new normal, you grow used to them all for the battlefront which doesn't
really exist people carry explosives around the city way too long the
artillery and the tanks stayed silent in their hangars when wars are over
we just collapse modern warfare is too large for the streets my brother
brought war to our crippled home Bessarabia, Galicia, 1913-1939
Pronouncements MARIANNA KIYANOVSKA I believed before in a tent like in a
nest we swallowed an air like earth I wake up, sigh, and head off to war
The eye, a bulb that maps its own bed Their tissue is coarse, like veins in
a petal Things swell closed. It's delicious to feel how fully Naked agony
begets a poison of poisons HALYNA KRUK A Woman Named Hope like a blood
clot, something catches him in the rye someone stands between you and death
like a bullet, the Lord saves those who save themselves OKSANA LUTSYSHYNA
eastern europe is a pit of death and decaying plums don't touch live flesh
he asks - don't help me I Dream of Explosions VASYL MAKHNO February Elegy
War Generation On War On Apollinaire MARJANA SAVKA We wrote poems Forgive
me, darling, I'm not a fighter january pulled him apart OSTAP SLYVYNSKY
Lovers on a Bicycle Lieutenant Alina 1918 Kicking the Ball in the Dark
Story (2) Latifa A Scene from 2014 Orpheus LYUBA YAKIMCHUK Died of Old Age
How I Killed Caterpillar Decomposition He Says Everything Will Be Fine
Eyebrows Funeral Services Crow, Wheels Knife SERHIY ZHADAN from Stones "We
speak of the cities we lived in . . ." "Now we remember: janitors and the
night-sellers of bread . . ." from Why I'm not on Social Media Needle
Headphones Sect Rhinoceros They buried him last winter Three Years Now
We've Been Talking about the War "A guy I know volunteered . . ." "Three
years now we've been talking about the war . . ." "So that's what their
family is like now . . ." "Sun, terrace, lots of green . . ." "The street.
A woman zigzags the street . . ." "Village street - gas line's broken . .
." "At least now, my friend says . . ." Thirty-Two Days Without Alcohol
Take Only What Is Most Important A city where she ended up hiding
Afterword: "On Decomposition and Rotten Plums: Language of War in
Contemporary Ukrainian Poetry" Polina Barskova Authors Translators Glossary
Geographical Locations and Places of Significance Notes to Poems
Acknowledgements Acknowledgement of Prior Publications
Preface Oksana Maksymchuk and Max Rosochinsky Introduction: "Barometers"
Ilya Kaminsky ANASTASIA AFANASIEVA she says we don't have the right kind of
basement in our building You whose inner void from Cold She Speaks On TV
the news showed from The Plain Sense of Things Untitled Can there be poetry
after VASYL HOLOBORODKO No Return I Fly Away in the Shape of a Dandelion
Seed The Dragon Hillforts I Pick up my Footprints BORYS HUMENYUK Our
platoon commander is a strange fellow These seagulls over the battlefield
When HAIL rocket launchers are firing Not a poem in forty days An old
mulberry tree near Mariupol When you clean your weapon A Testament YURI
IZDRYK Darkness Invisible Make Love ALEKSANDR KABANOV This is a post on
Facebook, and this, a block post in the East How I love - out of harm's way
A Former Dictator He came first wearing a t-shirt inscribed "Je suis
Christ" In the garden of Gethsemane on the Dnieper river A Russian tourist
is on vacation Fear is a form of the good Once upon a time, a Jew says to
his prisoner, his Hellenic foe KATERYNA KALYTKO They won't compose any
songs, because the children of their children April 6 This loneliness could
have a name, an Esther or a Miriam Home is still possible there, where they
hang laundry out to dry He Writes Can great things happen to ordinary
people? LYUDMYLA KHERSONSKA Did you know that if you hide under a blanket
and pull it over your head How to describe a human other than he's alone
The whole soldier doesn't suffer A country in the shape of a puddle, on the
map Buried in a human neck, a bullet looks like a eye, sewn in that's it:
you yourself choose how you live I planted a camellia in the yard One
night, a humanitarian convoy arrived in her dream When a country of -
overall - nice people Leave me alone, I'm crying. I'm crying, let me be the
enemy never ends every seventh child of ten - he's a shame you really don't
remember Grandpa - but let's say you do BORIS KHERSONSKY explosions are the
new normal, you grow used to them all for the battlefront which doesn't
really exist people carry explosives around the city way too long the
artillery and the tanks stayed silent in their hangars when wars are over
we just collapse modern warfare is too large for the streets my brother
brought war to our crippled home Bessarabia, Galicia, 1913-1939
Pronouncements MARIANNA KIYANOVSKA I believed before in a tent like in a
nest we swallowed an air like earth I wake up, sigh, and head off to war
The eye, a bulb that maps its own bed Their tissue is coarse, like veins in
a petal Things swell closed. It's delicious to feel how fully Naked agony
begets a poison of poisons HALYNA KRUK A Woman Named Hope like a blood
clot, something catches him in the rye someone stands between you and death
like a bullet, the Lord saves those who save themselves OKSANA LUTSYSHYNA
eastern europe is a pit of death and decaying plums don't touch live flesh
he asks - don't help me I Dream of Explosions VASYL MAKHNO February Elegy
War Generation On War On Apollinaire MARJANA SAVKA We wrote poems Forgive
me, darling, I'm not a fighter january pulled him apart OSTAP SLYVYNSKY
Lovers on a Bicycle Lieutenant Alina 1918 Kicking the Ball in the Dark
Story (2) Latifa A Scene from 2014 Orpheus LYUBA YAKIMCHUK Died of Old Age
How I Killed Caterpillar Decomposition He Says Everything Will Be Fine
Eyebrows Funeral Services Crow, Wheels Knife SERHIY ZHADAN from Stones "We
speak of the cities we lived in . . ." "Now we remember: janitors and the
night-sellers of bread . . ." from Why I'm not on Social Media Needle
Headphones Sect Rhinoceros They buried him last winter Three Years Now
We've Been Talking about the War "A guy I know volunteered . . ." "Three
years now we've been talking about the war . . ." "So that's what their
family is like now . . ." "Sun, terrace, lots of green . . ." "The street.
A woman zigzags the street . . ." "Village street - gas line's broken . .
." "At least now, my friend says . . ." Thirty-Two Days Without Alcohol
Take Only What Is Most Important A city where she ended up hiding
Afterword: "On Decomposition and Rotten Plums: Language of War in
Contemporary Ukrainian Poetry" Polina Barskova Authors Translators Glossary
Geographical Locations and Places of Significance Notes to Poems
Acknowledgements Acknowledgement of Prior Publications
Ilya Kaminsky ANASTASIA AFANASIEVA she says we don't have the right kind of
basement in our building You whose inner void from Cold She Speaks On TV
the news showed from The Plain Sense of Things Untitled Can there be poetry
after VASYL HOLOBORODKO No Return I Fly Away in the Shape of a Dandelion
Seed The Dragon Hillforts I Pick up my Footprints BORYS HUMENYUK Our
platoon commander is a strange fellow These seagulls over the battlefield
When HAIL rocket launchers are firing Not a poem in forty days An old
mulberry tree near Mariupol When you clean your weapon A Testament YURI
IZDRYK Darkness Invisible Make Love ALEKSANDR KABANOV This is a post on
Facebook, and this, a block post in the East How I love - out of harm's way
A Former Dictator He came first wearing a t-shirt inscribed "Je suis
Christ" In the garden of Gethsemane on the Dnieper river A Russian tourist
is on vacation Fear is a form of the good Once upon a time, a Jew says to
his prisoner, his Hellenic foe KATERYNA KALYTKO They won't compose any
songs, because the children of their children April 6 This loneliness could
have a name, an Esther or a Miriam Home is still possible there, where they
hang laundry out to dry He Writes Can great things happen to ordinary
people? LYUDMYLA KHERSONSKA Did you know that if you hide under a blanket
and pull it over your head How to describe a human other than he's alone
The whole soldier doesn't suffer A country in the shape of a puddle, on the
map Buried in a human neck, a bullet looks like a eye, sewn in that's it:
you yourself choose how you live I planted a camellia in the yard One
night, a humanitarian convoy arrived in her dream When a country of -
overall - nice people Leave me alone, I'm crying. I'm crying, let me be the
enemy never ends every seventh child of ten - he's a shame you really don't
remember Grandpa - but let's say you do BORIS KHERSONSKY explosions are the
new normal, you grow used to them all for the battlefront which doesn't
really exist people carry explosives around the city way too long the
artillery and the tanks stayed silent in their hangars when wars are over
we just collapse modern warfare is too large for the streets my brother
brought war to our crippled home Bessarabia, Galicia, 1913-1939
Pronouncements MARIANNA KIYANOVSKA I believed before in a tent like in a
nest we swallowed an air like earth I wake up, sigh, and head off to war
The eye, a bulb that maps its own bed Their tissue is coarse, like veins in
a petal Things swell closed. It's delicious to feel how fully Naked agony
begets a poison of poisons HALYNA KRUK A Woman Named Hope like a blood
clot, something catches him in the rye someone stands between you and death
like a bullet, the Lord saves those who save themselves OKSANA LUTSYSHYNA
eastern europe is a pit of death and decaying plums don't touch live flesh
he asks - don't help me I Dream of Explosions VASYL MAKHNO February Elegy
War Generation On War On Apollinaire MARJANA SAVKA We wrote poems Forgive
me, darling, I'm not a fighter january pulled him apart OSTAP SLYVYNSKY
Lovers on a Bicycle Lieutenant Alina 1918 Kicking the Ball in the Dark
Story (2) Latifa A Scene from 2014 Orpheus LYUBA YAKIMCHUK Died of Old Age
How I Killed Caterpillar Decomposition He Says Everything Will Be Fine
Eyebrows Funeral Services Crow, Wheels Knife SERHIY ZHADAN from Stones "We
speak of the cities we lived in . . ." "Now we remember: janitors and the
night-sellers of bread . . ." from Why I'm not on Social Media Needle
Headphones Sect Rhinoceros They buried him last winter Three Years Now
We've Been Talking about the War "A guy I know volunteered . . ." "Three
years now we've been talking about the war . . ." "So that's what their
family is like now . . ." "Sun, terrace, lots of green . . ." "The street.
A woman zigzags the street . . ." "Village street - gas line's broken . .
." "At least now, my friend says . . ." Thirty-Two Days Without Alcohol
Take Only What Is Most Important A city where she ended up hiding
Afterword: "On Decomposition and Rotten Plums: Language of War in
Contemporary Ukrainian Poetry" Polina Barskova Authors Translators Glossary
Geographical Locations and Places of Significance Notes to Poems
Acknowledgements Acknowledgement of Prior Publications