عرض مشاركة واحدة
قديم 06-13-2014, 11:13 AM
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بحثت كعادتي اكثر في السيرة الذاتية لهذا الشاعر وقد لفت انتباهي له وصف الاستاذ عادل له على انه ( تميز باستخدامه منطق الحلم والتلاعب السايكولوجي) ويمكنني القول ان هذه من صفات الأيتام .
وتظهر السيرة الذاتية باللغة الانجليزية أدناه انه فقد والده الذي كان طيار حربي مات اثناء مشاركته في الحرب العالمية الثانية بينما كان جيمس ما يزال في شهره الخامس من عمره فقط
وليس غريبا اذا ان تكون اول مجموعة شعرية له بعنوان الطيار المفقود وفي ذلك ما يشير الي ان والده لم يمت فقط اثناء القتال وانما فقد أيضاً ولذلك حاز كتابه الاول على ذلك الاستحسان حتما

أيضا ان اثر موت الاب عند هذا الشاعر واضح تماماً وهو معكوس بشكل جلي في أشعاره وعلى شاكلة سلفيا بلاث ولذلك فان التعمق في دراسته ودراسة أشعاره سوف تساعدنا اكثر على فهم العلاقة بين اليتم والابداع

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James Tate
1943- , Kansas City , MO
Chancellor 2001-2007

Photo credit: Andrea Holland
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On December 8, 1943, James Tate was born in Kansas City, Missouri. His father was an American pilot killed in the Second World War in 1944, when Tate was five months old.

His first collection of poems, The Lost Pilot (1967), was selected by Dudley Fitts for the Yale Series of Younger Poets while Tate was still a student at the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop, making him one of the youngest poets to receive the honor.

The collection was well-received, and influenced a generation of poets in the late sixties and seventies with its use of dream logic and psychological play. In a 1998 radio review, the critic Dana Gioia said about the debut: “Tate had domesticated surrealism. He had taken this foreign style, which had almost always seemed slightly alien in English—even among its most talented practitioners like Charles Simic and Donald Justice—and had made it sound not just native but utterly down-home.”

Tate published prolifically over the next two decades, including The Oblivion Ha-Ha (1970); Hints to Pilgrims (1971); Absences (1972); Viper Jazz (1976); Constant Defender (1983); Distance from Loved Ones (1990); and Selected Poems (1991), which won the Pulitzer Prize and the William Carlos Williams Award.

Since then, he has published several collections of poems, most recently The Eternal Ones of the Dream: Selected Poems 1990 - 2010 (Ecco Press, 2012); The Ghost Soldiers (2008); Return to the City of White Donkeys (2004); Memoir of the Hawk (2001); Shroud of the Gnome (1997); and Worshipful Company of Fletchers (1994), which won the National Book Award.

Tate has also published various works of prose, including a short story collection Dreams of a Robot Dancing Bee (Wave Books, 2001), a collection of critical prose, The Route as Briefed (University of Michigan Press, 1999), and a collaborative novel (with poet Bill Knott), Lucky Darryl (Release Press, 1977). He also served as editor of The Best American Poetry 1997.

About his work, the poet John Ashbery wrote in the New York Times: “Local color plays a role, but the main event is the poet’s wrestling with passing moments, frantically trying to discover the poetry there and to preserve it, perishable as it is. Tate is the poet of possibilities, of morph, of surprising consequences, lovely or disastrous, and these phenomena exist everywhere... I return to Tate’s books more often perhaps than to any others when I want to be reminded afresh of the possibilities of poetry.”

Tate’s honors include a National Institute of Arts and Letters Award for Poetry, the Wallace Stevens Award, a 1995 Tanning Prize, as well as fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. In 2001, he was elected a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets.

He teaches at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst.

Selected Bibliography

Poetry

The Lost Pilot (1967)
The Oblivion Ha-Ha (Carnegie-Mellon University Press, 1970)
Hints to Pilgrims (Halty Ferguson, 1971)
Absences (Little, Brown and Company, 1972)
Viper Jazz (Wesleyan University Press, 1976)
Riven Doggeries (Ecco Press, 1979)
Constant Defender (1983)
Reckoner (1986)
Distance from Loved Ones (1990)
Selected Poems (1991)
Worshipful Company of Fletchers (1994)
Shroud of the Gnome (1997)
Memoir of the Hawk (2001)
Return to the City of White Donkeys (2004)
The Ghost Soldiers (2008)

http://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/james-tate