Cipango

by Harris

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Book cover for Cipango

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Chilean poet Tomas Harris' "Cipango", first published in 1992, employs the metaphor of a journey. The poems allude to the voyage of Columbus, who believed that he had reached the Far East, not the Americas. Building on that mistaken historical premise, "Cipango" comments on the oppressive legacy of colonialism in Latin America - manifested in twentieth-century Chile through the 1973 military coup by Augusto Pinochet and the brutal dictatorship there - and on the violence and degradation of contemporary urban society. The author's vision is of a decadent, apocalyptic world that nonetheless contains the possibility for regeneration. "Cipango" is characterized by obsessive imagery, juxtapositions of contemporary and archaic language and of incongruous settings, the use of irony, and a dark voice. The speaker addresses Columbus, Marco Polo, and the Great Khan, and refers to sources including Columbus' diaries, "Genet", "Dracula", and "Goldfinger". "Cipango's" content and form combine to produce the effect of an epic poem.
This bilingual, en face edition of "Cipango" brings the lyricism and power of one of Chile's and Latin America's major poetic voices to an English-language readership. It will be of interest to poets, translators, and general readers as well as to instructors and students of Latin American and comparative literatures in the United States. Tomas Harris is considered one of Chile's most important contemporary poets. Daniel Shapiro is Director of Literature and Editor of "Review" magazine at the America's Society in New York.
  • ISBN13 9780838757345
  • Publish Date 30 January 2010
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Publisher Associated University Presses
  • Imprint Bucknell University Press,U.S.
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 328
  • Language English