Gratis Versand in ganz Österreich
Bookbot

Dan Beachy-Quick

    Library Of--
    The Thinking Root
    • Acclaimed poet and translator Dan Beachy-Quick offers this newest addition to the Seedbank series: a warm, vivid rendering of the earliest Greek intellects, inviting us to reconsider writing, and thinking, as a way of living meaningfully in the world. "We have lost our sense of thinking as the experience that keeps us in the world," writes Beachy-Quick, and the figures rendered in The Thinking Root--Heraclitus, Anaximander, Empedocles, Parmenides, and others--are among the first examples we have in Western civilization of thinkers who used writing as to record their impressions of a world where intuition and observation, and spirit and nature, have yet to be estranged. In these pages, we find clear-eyed ideas searching for shapes and forms with which to order the world, and to reveal our life in flux. Drawn from "words that think," these ancient Greek texts are fresh and alive in the hands of Beachy-Quick, who translates with the empathy of one who knows that "a word is its own form of life." In aphorisms, axioms, vignettes, and anecdotes, these first theories of the world articulate a relationship to the world that precedes our story of its making, a world where "the beginning and the end are in common." A remarkable collection from one of our most accomplished poets, The Thinking Root renders a primary apprehension of life amidst life, a vision that echoes our gaze upon the stars.

      The Thinking Root
    • Library Of--

      • 58 Seiten
      • 3 Lesestunden

      The artist Roni Horn's permanent installation in Iceland, Library of Water, consists of floor-to-ceiling cylinders filled with water-melted ice from all of Iceland's twenty-four glaciers. These poems are inspired by this simultaneous act of attention to crisis and preservation against it. The "library" of these poems imagines each letter of the alphabet as its own peculiar archive, part deeply personal, part radically in common. Each poem seeks to catalog a set of associations embedded in the memories, experiences, and curious resonances each letter evokes. The urgency underlying the project-not exactly ecological, but not exactly not-lurks in that vague but omnipresent sense of oblivion's inevitability. This is tied to the ancient Greek sense of ???????, truth as that which shines out of actual being, and the ???? hidden in that same word, that oblivion, that forgetting-that melting away as of ice into water and water into air-that abides in what truth we know.

      Library Of--