The Feeling Sonnets

The Feeling Sonnets

by Eugene Ostashevsky
The Feeling Sonnets

The Feeling Sonnets

by Eugene Ostashevsky

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Overview

Slyly funny, inventive, and virtuosic, this new collection from a Russian-American master challenges poetic convention and explores themes of alienhood, translation, and human emotion.

In Eugene Ostashevsky’s The Feeling Sonnets—his fourth collection of poems— words, idioms, sentences, and poetic conventions are dislodged and defamiliarized in order to convey the experience of living in a land, and a language, apart. The book consists of four cycles of fourteen unrhymed, unmetered sonnets. The first cycle asks about the relationship between interpretation and emotion, whether “we feel the feelings that we call ours.” The second cycle, mainly composed of “daughter sonnets,” describes bringing up children in a foreign country and a foreign language. The third cycle, called “Die Schreibblockade,” German for writer’s block, talks about foreign-language processing of inherited historical trauma, in this case the siege of Leningrad from 1941 to 1944. The fourth cycle is about translation. The sonnets are followed by a short libretto, commissioned by the Italian composer Lucia Ronchetti, about Ravel’s interaction with Paul Wittgenstein over the Piano Concerto for the Left Hand.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781681377032
Publisher: New York Review Books
Publication date: 10/11/2022
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 96
File size: 700 KB

About the Author

Eugene Ostashevsky is a poet and translator who was born in Leningrad, USSR, grew up in New York, and currently lives in New York and Berlin. His poetry collection The Pirate Who Does Not Know the Value of Pi, published by NYRB Poets, discusses the pitfalls of pirate-parrot communication. Its German edition won the 2019 International Poetry Prize from the City of Muenster. An earlier collection, The Life and Opinions of DJ Spinoza, published by Ugly Duckling Presse, offers an ironic take on rationality. His  translation titles include OBERIU: An Anthology of Russian Absurdism, the first collection of writings by Alexander Vvedensky and friends in English.

Table of Contents

The Feeling Sonnets 7

The Fooling Sonnets 25

Die Schreibblockade; or, The Feeding Sonnets 43

Fourteen Ways of Looking at a Translator; or, The Leafing Sonnets 67

Ravel Unravel 89

The Loneliness of the Hungarians 96

Albers 2 97

Notes 99

Acknowledgements 105

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