Реферат

Реферат на тему On War Poems Of The United Nations

Работа добавлена на сайт bukvasha.net: 2015-06-17

Поможем написать учебную работу

Если у вас возникли сложности с курсовой, контрольной, дипломной, рефератом, отчетом по практике, научно-исследовательской и любой другой работой - мы готовы помочь.

Предоплата всего

от 25%

Подписываем

договор

Выберите тип работы:

Скидка 25% при заказе до 8.11.2024


On War Poems Of The United Nations Essay, Research Paper

Joy Davidman

Excerpt from the Editor’s Foreword to War Poems of the United Nations

. . .

Poems are an integral part of the underground movements in the occupied countries of

Europe, but few of them have reached us. Nevertheless

the war has already stimulated poets everywhere so much that an anthology like this one

can provide a fair sample of the poetry of the anti-Fascist struggle.

We

have included in our definition of the war every conflict that has taken place since

Hitler’s first rise to power; the ten-year-long fight of China, the tragic battle of

Republican Spain against Fascism, and the lonely struggles of German and Austrian

anti-Fascists are as much part of the great crisis of our time as what is happening today

in Africa. Thus we have been able to include

the magnificent fighting poems of German and Spanish refugees, as well as poetry from many

Latin American countries not actually at war. We

have unfortunately been unable, in the time at our disposal, to procure poems from

Jugoslavia, Greece, Belgium, and Holland. Our

French section consists almost entirely of poems printed under Vichy, and gains a peculiar

interest through the ingenuity with which its authors express anti-Fascist sentiment in

veiled language. The section from the British

Empire has been deliberately limited by us in order to exclude certain defeatist and

appeaser elements which are fortunately losing their quondam influence on renascent

British poetry.

In the

section devoted to the United States, we have concentrated on the work of new poets

developed by the war, some of whom are actually in the armed forces; although most of the

great names of American poetry are also represented.

The Soviet Russian section is unique in being itself a small anthology of

the war poems of many different Soviet Republics, including Central Asian peoples whose

very names are little known here.

From

Joy Davidman, foreword, War Poems of the United Nations, ed. Joy Davidman (New

York: Dial Press, 1943) vii-viii.

Oliver Pilat

Excerpt from "Girl Communist"

[From

October 31 through November 13, 1949, The New York Post ran a twelve part series

entitled "Girl Communist, An Intimate Story of Eight years in the Party" in

which Oliver Pilat interviewed Joy Davidman. Because

American Communists were subject to legal sanctions, Pilat thinks that this legal issue

"has obscured the real questions facing a democracy," and his interview is an

attempt to balance the picture as Davidman discusses her reasons for joining and later

leaving the Party as well as the Party's daily operations.

In the following excerpt, Davidman provides a caveat for War Poems of

the United Nations by explaining why she ghost wrote some of the poems. The excerpt combines Pilat's summaries and

Davidman's direct quotations.]

Some

ethical problems were involved in producing an "Anthology of War Poems of the United

Nations." This opus was almost the final

act of the League of American Writers, which died in 1942 of an ideologically broken back

through shifting too abruptly from an earlier anti-war position.

A

committee of poets was named to help Joy Davidman, but the committee promptly evaporated,

leaving her alone to meet the terms of a formidable Dial Press contract.

What

help she had came largely in the form of letters from women’s poetry clubs reading like

this: "There are 11 of us. We are each

sending you a copy of a poem for your book." Invariably

the poems were unreadable.

For

four months, Joy Davidman collected, selected, translated and edited poems from all over

the world. Refugees did some translating, but

she had to do much of it herself. Unable to

locate any decent English war poetry, she was obliged to invent two English poets.

One of

the imaginary bards had the mouth-filling name of Megan Coombs-Dawson. The other was Hayden Weir. As an authentic touch, Weir was reported to have

died heroically in battle.

Joy

Davidman asked the Soviet Writers Union for war poems, but its selections did not arrive

until a year after the book went to press in 1944, so she was forced to supplement

inadequate offerings from the Russian American Institute.

"After

the book appeared, I saw a clipping from Russia complaining about my translation of a line

by Pasternak," she recalls. "The

funny thing was that I had practically made up that whole poem except for the one line by

Pasternak which had been in the middle of his poem and which I put at the end of mine.

(sic)

"If

anybody says this was dishonest, remember I was translating 20 poems a day at the time. Where I could find anything decent to translate, I

did translate accurately."

She

smiles. "In any event, it can now be

told: anything resembling poetry in the Soviet section of that book owes a great deal to

Joy Davidman. I also did a lot for the Poles

. . ." (sic)

From

Oliver Pilat, "Girl Communist," New York Post 8 Nov. 1949: 9, 14; pt. 8

of a series Girl Communist–An Intimate Story of Eight Years in the Party, begun 31

October 1949.


1. Реферат на тему Brain Sides Essay Research Paper The article
2. Контрольная работа на тему Психология менеджмента
3. Реферат Фондовый рынок. его сущность
4. Реферат Соціальна система в Німеччині
5. Статья Оседание планул беломорских гидроидов
6. Контрольная работа Преступления в сфере медицинской деятельности
7. Реферат на тему Irish Involvement In The Civil Waril Essay
8. Курсовая на тему Транснациональные корпорации Их роль в мировой экономике
9. Реферат на тему Социально-экономические результаты отмены крепостного права в России
10. Реферат Рынок ОВГЗ и роль НБУ