y separately published work icon V-Letter, and Other Poems selected work   poetry  
Issue Details: First known date: 1944... 1944 V-Letter, and Other Poems
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Notes

  • Dedication: To My Mother
  • 'V-Letter is composed in part of transition poems. Seen from Australia or New Guinea, the city-world of the United States' east coast lost much of its power to stir Shapiro's anger.' William van O'Connor, 'Karl Shapiro: The Development of a Talent', College English 10.2 (November 1948): 74.
  • Author's Introduction: Since the war began, I have tried to be on my guard against becoming a "war poet"...It is not the commonplace of suffering or the platitudinous comparison with the peace, or the focus on the future that should occupy us; but the spiritual progress or retrogression of the man in war, the increase or decrease in his knowledge of beauty, government and religion. We know very well that the most resounding slogans ring dead after a few years, and that it is not for poetry to keep pace with public speeches and the strategy of events.....
  • 'V-Letter is in certain respects a more uneven collection than its predecessors. ...But in many of the poems written in the Southwest Pacific he was dealing with a new and different culture which he could view only from the outside....He is consistent, however, in his use of concrete details to create an impression or a mood. Some of his poems of 'Place', like 'Melbourne' and 'New Guinea', are little more than travelogues in verse. Others, like 'Hill at Parramatta' and 'Sydney Bridge' convey the authentic quality of a landscape and its meaning to a stranger from America.' Dayton Kohler, 'Karl Shapiro: Poet in Uniform', College English 2.5 (February 1946): 248.

Contents

* Contents derived from the London,
c
England,
c
c
United Kingdom (UK),
c
Western Europe, Europe,
:
Secker and Warburg , 1945 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Hill at Parramattai"Just like a wave, the long green hill of my desire", Karl Shapiro , single work poetry (p. 10)
Melbournei"The planted palms will keep the city warm", Karl Shapiro , single work poetry (p. 11)
Sydney Bridgei"Though I see you, O rainbow of iron and rivetted lace,", Karl Shapiro , single work poetry (p. 12)
Christmas Eve: Australiai"The wind blowshot. English and foreign birds", Karl Shapiro , single work poetry (p. 13-14)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Works about this Work

News from Australia : Global Modernism Studies and the Case of Australian Modernism Melinda Cooper , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Routledge Companion to Australian Literature 2020; (p. 181-192)

"One of the major developments in literary studies of the past two decades is the resurgence of interest in the discursive fields of both modernism and modernity. This chapter asks what the case of Australian modernism can offer to global modernism studies. In many ways, Australian modernism provides an exemplary illustration of the temporal, geographical, vertical, and aesthetic expansions theorised by the ‘new modernist’ studies. Yet Australian modernism can also point to some of the problems, blind spots, and elisions of expanded theorisations of modernism. By exploring examples from both settler and Indigenous art and literature, this chapter shows that the concepts produced in the metropolitan centres of modernism studies can be modified and made more nuanced by coming into contact with the complexities of a settler-colonial situation."

Source: Abstract.

[Untitled] 1945 single work review
— Appears in: Punch , 22 August 1945; (p. 169)

— Review of V-Letter, and Other Poems Karl Shapiro , 1944 selected work poetry
[Untitled] 1945 single work review
— Appears in: Punch , 22 August 1945; (p. 169)

— Review of V-Letter, and Other Poems Karl Shapiro , 1944 selected work poetry
News from Australia : Global Modernism Studies and the Case of Australian Modernism Melinda Cooper , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Routledge Companion to Australian Literature 2020; (p. 181-192)

"One of the major developments in literary studies of the past two decades is the resurgence of interest in the discursive fields of both modernism and modernity. This chapter asks what the case of Australian modernism can offer to global modernism studies. In many ways, Australian modernism provides an exemplary illustration of the temporal, geographical, vertical, and aesthetic expansions theorised by the ‘new modernist’ studies. Yet Australian modernism can also point to some of the problems, blind spots, and elisions of expanded theorisations of modernism. By exploring examples from both settler and Indigenous art and literature, this chapter shows that the concepts produced in the metropolitan centres of modernism studies can be modified and made more nuanced by coming into contact with the complexities of a settler-colonial situation."

Source: Abstract.

Last amended 11 Jul 2007 11:48:14
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