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Tom Paulin

    Tom Paulin est un poète, critique et dramaturge dont les premières œuvres abordent souvent la situation politique et la violence sectaire en Irlande du Nord. Sa poésie est reconnue pour son examen incisif des identités culturelles et des problèmes sociétaux, explorant fréquemment de manière provocatrice les États-nations et leur impact sur la littérature. L'écriture de Paulin se caractérise par sa profondeur intellectuelle, sa précision linguistique et une volonté inébranlable de découvrir l'interaction complexe entre politique, histoire et art. Sa production ultérieure s'étend à des projets épiques et des traductions, démontrant son intérêt durable pour la formation des canons littéraires et de la tradition poétique.

    The Day-Star of Liberty
    The wind dog
    • The wind dog

      • 96pages
      • 4 heures de lecture

      An outstanding collection of poems by Tom Paulin, one of Britain's most original poets and literary critics "o chitterin chatterin platinum licht the bow shall be in the clouds and I will look upon it to remember the everlasting testament between God and all that liveth upon earth whatsoever flesh or faith it be --they may have turned Tyndale into tinder but the bow he wrought lives high in this wet blue sky" --from "The Wind Dog" In the north of Ireland, a "wind dog" is a fragment of a rainbow, and in the title poem of this collection, it provides Tom Paulin with a perfect bridge into childhood and its "lingo-jingo of beginnings." The poem is a singing meditation on the life of the ear--"the only true reader"--and the meaning and music of both words and preverbal sounds are a recurring theme in this rich, cogent, and adventurous volume.

      The wind dog1999
      3,0
    • The Day-Star of Liberty

      William Hazlitt's Radical Style

      • 382pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      In The Day-Star of Liberty, Tom Paulin sets out to place William Hazlitt-master of the essay form, the first major art and drama critic, and one of the most outstanding political and literary journalists Britain has ever produced-in his rightful position as a great prose writer and an exemplary literary artist. Not only are the importance of Hazlitt's Irish background and the significance of the Unitarian culture in which he was brought up central to this portrait but the sheer intellectual joy that is evident in Hazlitt's writing and that he wished his readers to share is communicated with comparable energy and relish through Paulin's own prose. A work of critical restitution, The Day-Star of Liberty restores an unjustly neglected figure to the literary canon and shows the means by which Hazlitt's creative genius transformed journalism and criticism into art forms, making it possible for Hazlitt's collected works to be read as one of the great Romantic autobiographies. 16 Pages of Black-and-White Art Notes/Bibliography/Index Tom Paulin was born in Leeds, England, in 1949. He is the G. M. Young Lecturer in English Literature at Hertford College, Oxford University.

      The Day-Star of Liberty1978