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Walcott’s New Book Has Been Released

220px-Derek_WalcottFrom  claudia.monlouis

A new publication based on the work of Saint Lucian Literary living legend Honourable  Derek Walcott has been acclaimed as an essential addition to the understanding and appreciation of Walcott’s work.

The book entitled “Interlocking Basins of a Globe – Essays on Derek Walcott”  feature essays that range from discussion of Walcott’s earliest poetry in Twenty-Five Poems (1948) to his most recent collections that explore encroaching old age, The Prodigal (2004) and White Egrets (2010).

The Publisher of the newly launched book is Peepal Tree Press.    Founder of Peepal Tree Press Jeremy Poynting says the essays written on Walcott’s work which comprises several contributors including Monsignor Patrick Anthony will also be useful to students who are studying his work.

“I like very much that this was a book with a very real Caribbean center of gravity.   It’s a book which brings Derek Walcott back home and that I really like about it. I will say a special thank you to the Thomas Fisher rare Book Library for giving permission to and giving us access to their work there and to Derek Walcott himself for giving us permission to use 51v3ice9NKL._SY346_his artwork, the beautiful painting which is on the cover of the book that I think is just right.”

According to the official review on the book notes quote   “The contributors to this collection are predominantly, but not wholly, Caribbean-based, which ensures that, whilst his position as poet of the world is celebrated, the Caribbean, and more specifically Saint Lucia, is seen as the source to which Derek Walcott’s writing constantly returns”  unquote.

The book was edited by Dr. Jean Antoine Dunne who is a Senior Lecturer in Literatures in English at the University of the West Indies, St Augustine. She was born in Trinidad.

Related story:

Interlocking Basins of a Globe : Essays on Derek Walcott

From peepaltreepress.com

An essential addition to the understanding and appreciation of Walcott’s work, these essays range from discussion of Walcott’s earliest poetry in Twenty-Five Poems (1948) to his most recent collections that explore encroaching old age, The Prodigal (2004) and White Egrets (2010).

The contributors to this collection are predominantly, but not wholly, Caribbean-based, which ensures that, whilst his position as poet of the world is celebrated, the Caribbean, and more specifically St Lucia, is seen as the source to which Derek Walcott’s writing constantly returns.

Gordon Rohlehr offers a powerfully contextualised political and aesthetic reading of the whole range of Walcott’s poetry; Harold McDermott surveys the “mulatto” aesthetics of Walcott’s critical writing; Rachel Friedman, a Homer scholar, notes how Walcott’s work in Omeros and The Odyssey: A Stage Version challenges a rereading of the original epics; Edward Baugh, perhaps the most distinguished of all Walcott critics, explores how Walcott’s poetry crosses local and international spaces; Rhonda Cobham-Sander revisits the old story of the alleged competitive relationship between Walcott and Kamau Brathwaite and finds a flow of influence from the latter to the former; Louis Regis documents Walcott’s writing on calypso as part of Walcott’s ambivalent relationship to the popular; Jean Antoine-Dunne explores the visual/filmic imagination in Walcott’s work; Edward Chamberlin, and Jennifer Toews write about the Walcott archive at the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto and make available eighteen reproductions of Derek Walcott’s theatre sketches, most in full colour; Kenneth Ramchand looks closely at Walcott’s approach to the Indo-Caribbean Ramlila in his Nobel speech, “The Antilles: Fragments of Epic Memory”; Antonia MacDonald, who grew up in St Lucia, confronts the problems of how to teach the real complexity of Walcott’s work to young people in St Lucia; George B. Handley uses an ecocritical focus on Walcott’s poems of nature to chart a persistent element of spirituality in his work; and finally, there is Patrick Anthony’s essay on the ambivalent religious impulse in Walcott’s later work and his focus on death and after death.

Dr Jean Antoine-Dunne is a Senior Lecturer in Literatures in English at the University of the West Indies, St Augustine. She was born in Trinidad.

For more on this story go to:

http://www.peepaltreepress.com/single_book_display.asp?isbn=9781845232207

 

 

 

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