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University of Hunger Martin Carter

University of Hunger By Martin Carter

University of Hunger by Martin Carter


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Summary

The Guyanese poet Martin Carter (1927-97) was one of the foremost Caribbean writers of the 20th century. He wrote about slavery, Amerindian history and Indian Indentureship in relation to contemporary concerns. Wise, angry and hopeful, Carter's poetry voices a life lived in times of public and private crisis.

University of Hunger Summary

University of Hunger: Collected Poems & Selected Prose by Martin Carter

The Guyanese poet Martin Carter (1927-97) was one of the foremost Caribbean writers of the 20th century. Twice imprisoned by the colonial government of British Guiana during the Emergency in the 1950s, he became a minister in Guyanas first independent government during the 60s, representing his country at the United Nations, but resigned in disillusionment after three years to live simply as a poet, remaining with the people. He was one of the first Caribbean poets to write about slavery, Amerindian history and Indian Indentureship in relation to contemporary concerns. Wise, angry and hopeful, Carters poetry voices a life lived in times of public and private crisis. Gemma Robinsons helpfully annotated edition is the first Collected Poems of Martin Carter. The selected prose includes key essays on race, colonialism, political action and the role of the poet in a postcolonial society.

University of Hunger Reviews

The work in University of Hunger ranges from lyrics to arguments to riddles. Carters poetry, known by heart by his fellow Guyanese, deserves to live deep in global memory. Responsive to the white dust and red flowers of his homeland, for Carter the political is personal. Jailed for his part in the independence struggle, he foxed surveillance photographers by displaying poems on his home. Whether in tenderness for green, green love or in furious search of a comrade stargazer, he desires a freedom that would write a "happier alphabet". -- Vahni Capildeo * Reader's Digest *
His impulse was always lyrical, he was a great reciter, he had a great voice, he had a great joy in the sound of the poemthe example of his work was phenomenalWest Indian literature even in English is totally underestimated, totally. The literature is astonishing, the quality is astonishingly high. And Martins position in all this is special. -- Derek Walcott
A major contribution to Guyanese scholarship. This sets the standard for editions of Caribbean poetry. -- David Dabydeen
Carter has a stature in the collective consciousness of Guyana that is quite unique among writers in the English-speaking Caribbeanhe will remain one of the greatest writers of that periodCarter will stand in the very first ranks of the writers of the Americas. -- George Lamming

About Martin Carter

The Guyanese poet Martin Carter (1927-97) was one of the foremost Caribbean writers of the 20th century. Twice imprisoned by the colonial government of British Guiana during the Emergency in the 1950s, he became a minister in Guyanas first independent government during the 60s, representing his country at the United Nations, but resigned in disillusionment after three years to live simply as a poet, remaining with the people. He was one of the first Caribbean poets to write about slavery, Amerindian history and Indian Indentureship in relation to contemporary concerns. Wise, angry and hopeful, Carters poetry voices a life lived in times of public and private crisis. Martin Carters poetry was first published in Britain in 1954 by the leftwing publishing house Lawrence & Wishart when publication in colonial British Guiana wasnt possible, and later by New Beacon Books. He appeared in E.A. Markhams seminal anthology Hinterland (Bloodaxe, 1989) as one of the father figures of modern Caribbean poetry. Two editions of Selected Poems by Martin Carter followed, one in Guyana in 1997 and another in Britain by Peepal Tree in 1999. Stewart Browns critical anthology All Are Involved: The Art of Martin Carter also appeared from Peepal Tree in 1999. The first comprehensive edition of his work was University of Hunger: Collected Poems & Selected Prose, edited by Gemma Robinson (Bloodaxe Books, 2006).

Additional information

NGR9781852247102
9781852247102
185224710X
University of Hunger: Collected Poems & Selected Prose by Martin Carter
New
Paperback
Bloodaxe Books Ltd
2006-03-30
320
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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