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The Geography of the Imagination Guy Davenport

The Geography of the Imagination By Guy Davenport

The Geography of the Imagination by Guy Davenport


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The Geography of the Imagination Summary

The Geography of the Imagination: Forty Essays by Guy Davenport

One of the most sinuous stylists and searching minds of the twentieth century.Washington Post

Forty essays on history, art, and literature to lift your mind and spirit. Guy Davenport provides links between music and sculpture, modernist poets and classic philosophers, the past and presentand pretty much everything in between. Not only had Davenport seemingly read (and often translated from the original languages) everything ever written, he also had the ability, expressed with unalloyed enthusiasm, to draw connections between how cultural synapses make, define, and reflect our civilization.

Davenport serves as the readers guide through history and literature, pointing out the values and avenues of thought that have shaped our ideas and our thinking. In these forty essays we find fresh thinking on Greek culture, Whitman, Spinoza, Wittgenstein, Melville, Tolkien, Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens, Charles Olson, Marianne Moore, Eudora Welty, Louis Zukovsky, and many others. Each essay is a tour of the history of ideas and imagination, written with wit and startling erudition.

This Nonpareil edition includes a new introduction by John Jeremiah Sullivan.

The Geography of the Imagination Reviews

Guy Davenport [was] a writer who contained multitudes. The Geography of the Imagination, his masterwork, is as protean and plentiful as its author....What arent the 40 essays in it about? Davenport was too delighted in rhymes, or affinities, as he put it, to tackle one subject at a time. Accordingly, a rumination on cave painting is also a reflection on Pablo Picasso; a musing on the 19th-century art critic John Ruskin is also a meditation on labyrinths....He did not write to impress or intimidate though he may have done both inadvertently but rather to articulate his awe. The same man who enjoyed explicating the most arcane allusions in Pounds impenetrabilia also observed, earnestly and beautifully, Two lives we lead: in the world and in our minds. Only a work of art can show us how to do it.
Washington Post

Davenports insights approach the pyrotechnical, but his prose is approachable, never pedantic....Effortlessly, unabashedly learned; tender beneath its professional carapace....Davenports criticism feels so self-contained that one swallows it with the hungry thoughtlessness of an eternal student.
Harpers

The Geography of the Imagination is a book I often bring with me when I travel because no matter my mood, theres usually an essay to suit it and because so many of the essays bear reading a third or even a fourth time. And thats one of the marks of great literature even after half a dozen readings, it still holds your attention, and youre still aha-ing over things you missed the last time around.
Arts Fuse

Guy Davenport writes, in one of these lovely essays, about Joyce's stylistic signature, his labyrinthine thumbprint. And that labyrinthine thumbprint is how we know Davenport, too. A kind of Kentucky Sir Thomas Browne, he is a fascinated collector of marvels, an antiquarian but also a modernist, a curious imaginer, an omnivorous swallower of all traditions who is always boldly creating his ownnothing less than a geography that might stretch from the shores of the Mediterranean all the way to Iowa.
James Wood, author of Serious Noticing: Selected Essays 19972019

No one writes like Guy Davenport. Hes a genius, sure, but also a delightful, generous example of how exhilarating the life of the mind can be. These inventive and harmonious essays are a dazzling reminder that great writing is also great fun.
Jenny Offill, author of Weather

TheGeography of the Imagination offers take-to-a-desert-island levels of companionship. Davenport is simultaneously a reliable and marvelously unpredictable friend.
Rivka Galchen, author of Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch

More than its erudition, which seems inexhaustible and impossible; more than its quality of attention, animated in prose exact and alive and authoritative; more even than its elected awes, what distinguishes Guy Davenports criticism is its steadfastness inand totradition. A tradition that was, as he wrote, rotting all around him. Still, he wroteand how!past all the agents of decay, past ignorance, amnesia, incoherence, unreason, error, and entertainment, into seed-rich solum, blood and bone, where all past is dense present, and there he found what was best and most beautiful and brought it back up for us to see. No small work. If tradition survives, it will be in no small measure due to Guy Davenport, who is bedrock now.
Nam Le, author of 36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem

As a critic, Davenport shines as an intrepid appreciator, an ideal teacher. By preference, he likes to walk the reader through a painting or a poem, teasing out the meaning of odd details, making connections with history and other works of art. His must-have essay collections, TheGeography of the Imagination display his range: With a rainwater clarity, he can write about the naturalist Louis Agassiz or ancient poetry and thoughtHe can account for the importance of prehistoric cave art to early modernism or outline the achievements of Joyce and Pound. He can make you yearn to read or look again at neglected masters like the poets Charles Olsen and Louis Zukofsky and the painters Balthus and Charles Burchfield. He can send you out eagerly searching for C. M. Doughtys six-volume epic poem, The Dawn in Britain, and for the works of Ronald Johnson, Jonathan Williams and Paul Metcalf. In all this, his method is nothing other than the deep attentiveness engendered by love: that and a firm faith in simply knowing things. He conveys, to adopt his own words about painter Paul Cadmus, a perfect balance of spirit and information.
Washington Post Book World

Guy Davenports genius merits awe, but inspires excitement. His writing reminds us that our time is finite, and that the world's offerings are infinite. Reading these essays will make you feel more alive.
Jonathan Safran Foer, author of We Are the Weather: Saving the Planet Begins at Breakfast

There is no way to prepare yourself for reading Guy Davenport. You stand in awe before his knowledge of the archaic and his knowledge of the modern. Even more, you stand in awe of the connections he can make between the archaic and the modern; he makes the remote familiar and the familiar fundamental.
Los Angeles Times Book Review

About Guy Davenport

Guy Davenport was a writer of fiction, illustrator, teacher, scholar, translator, poet, and critic. Mr. Davenport published over 40 books, among them collections of short stories, translations from the Greek, illustrated works, a novel, and critical studies on literature, culture, and art. John Jeremiah Sullivan lives in Wilmington, North Carolina, and is a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine. He is the author of the book Blood Horses: Notes of a Sportswriters Son and the essay collection Pulphead. His awards include the Whiting Award, the National Magazine Award, the James Beard Writing Award, and the Windham-Campbell Prize.

Additional information

GOR013688682
9781567927771
1567927777
The Geography of the Imagination: Forty Essays by Guy Davenport
Used - Very Good
Paperback
David R. Godine Publisher Inc
2024-02-29
592
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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