Still Life: Poetry from the Cheshire Prize for Literature 2010 - Couverture souple

 
9781905929887: Still Life: Poetry from the Cheshire Prize for Literature 2010

Synopsis

In a hot Spanish kitchen a little boy's mouth waters as he daydreams about the citrus tang of freshly-squeezed juice; in the weak sunlight outside a Russian Orthodox church, splinters of wood dance like so many motes of dust; and in a camp in Germany three prisoners of war look upwards and marvel at the near-weightless liberty of the birds they see. These are some of the exquisite moments almost visual in their vibrancy that are captured in the pages of Still Life. In this rich and textured anthology, the mundane is transfi gured as poets attempt to answer or at least to establish the big questions of life. In being recalled and recorded in poetry, still lives are endowed both with vitality and with a particular kind of immortality, too. The Cheshire Prize for Literature was inaugurated in 2003 as the High Sheriff s Cheshire Prize for Literature. It is funded by Bank of America and administered by the University of Chester. The 2010 competition was for poetry and this anthology contains 58 of the short-listed entries, including those of the eventual winners. Details of the prize are available at www.chester.ac.uk/ literatureprize

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À propos de l?auteur

Emma Rees is a Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Chester. Her Margaret Cavendish was published in 2004, and she is currently working on Can't: Uncovering the Postmodern Vagina. She has contributed essays to recent books including one on Shakespeare and gender for Rhetorics of Bodily Disease and Health in Medieval and Early Modern England; one on 19th-century gynaecology for The Female Body in Medicine and Literature; a section on Shakespeare and the Renaissance for Studying Literature; and a chapter, co-authored with Richard E. Wilson, on Freudian fetishism, in Led Zeppelin and Philosophy. Emma was born and bred in Birmingham, moving to Chester in 1999 after living in Norwich for several years, where she taught at UEA.

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