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The Black Heralds (Lannan Literary Selections) (Spanish Edition)
 
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The Black Heralds (Lannan Literary Selections) (Spanish Edition) [Paperback]

César Vallejo (Author), Rebecca Seiferle (Translator)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Lannan Literary Selections October 1, 2003

Throughout his life, César Vallejo (1892–1938) focused on human suffering and the isolation of people victimized by inexplicable forces. One of the great Spanish language poets, he merged radical politics and language consciousness, resulting in the first examples of a truly new world poetry.

The Black Heralds is Vallejo’s first book and contains a wide range of poems, from love sonnets in which he struggles to free his erotic life from the bounds of Spanish Catholicism to the linguistically inventive sequence, "Imperial Nostalgias," where he parodies with considerable savagery the pastoral romanticism of Indian and rural life.

In this bilingual volume, translator Rebecca Seiferle attempts to undo the "colonization" of Vallejo in other translations. As Seiferle writes in her introduction: "Reading and translating Vallejo has been a long process of trying to meet him on his own terms, to discover what those terms were within the contexts of his particular time and, finally, taking his word for it."

from "Our Bread"

And in this frigid hour, when the earth
smells of human dust and is so sad,
I want to knock on every door
and beg forgiveness of I don’t know whom,
and bake bits of fresh bread for him,
here, in the oven of my heart...!

César Vallejo (1892–1938) was born in Peru to a family of mixed Spanish and native descent. He wrote two books of poetry, the second of which was partly composed during a short prison term. Disappointed by the reception of his poetry in his own country, Vallejo moved to Paris, where he became active in Marxist politics and the antifascist campaign in Spain, while publishing essays, political -articles, a play, and short stories. Vallejo died in Paris, in utter poverty, on the day Franco’s armies entered Madrid.


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

It is surprising that Los Heraldos Negros has not been translated into English before. Together with Rilke and Lorca, Vallejo may be among the most important poets of the 20th century. Few poets have ever expressed the human condition as Vallejo did; compared with Neruda's sometimes glib, easy lyricism, Vallejo's verse is a convoluted thorn bush of passion and suffering. This, his first book of poetry, already reveals the complex intellectual, emotional, and spiritual qualities that characterize his later work (e.g, Poemas Humanos ). From the very first line ("There are blows in life, so hard . . . I just don't know!"), the discerning reader is convinced that what follows will be a profound literary experience, a life per ceived from a harrowingly surrealistic perspective: "To go along dying and singing. And to baptize the shadows/ with Babylonian blood." Essential for anyone seriously interested in modern poetry.
- Ivan Arguelles, Univ. of California Lib., Berkeley
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

.........?
Absolute Doctrine
Agape
Altarpiece
Autuchthonous Tercet
Away
Babel
The Black Cup
The Black Heralds
Book Of Saints
Burning Coals
Christmas Eve
Communion
Dead Idyll
The Distant Footsteps
Dregs
The Eternal Dice
The Eternal Marriage Bed
Feverlace
Fit Of Anguish
For The Impossible Soul Of My Beloved
Forbidden Love
Fresco
God
Godless Woman
Gypsum
Huaco
Icy Gunwhales
Imperial Nostalgias
In The Greek Tents
January Epic
Last Words
Leaves Of Ebony
Lines
Love
May
The Miserable Supper
The Mule Drivers
Naked In Clay
The Narrow Theater Box
Oration Of The Road
Ostrich
Our Daily Bread
Pagan Woman
Pilgrimage
The Poet To His Beloved
Rain
Sacred Falling Of Leaves
September
The Spider
The Stones
Summer
Surrender
To My Brother Miguel
Twilight
Under The Poplars
Unity
Unseasonable Time
Village Scene
The Voice In The Mirror
The Weary Circles
White Rose
Willow
Win A Thousand
-- Table of Poems from Poem Finder® --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 250 pages
  • Publisher: Copper Canyon Press; 1 edition (October 1, 2003)
  • Language: Spanish
  • ISBN-10: 1556591993
  • ISBN-13: 978-1556591990
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #741,305 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Poet of Suffering, November 13, 2003
By 
This review is from: The Black Heralds (Lannan Literary Selections) (Spanish Edition) (Paperback)
I have not read Ms. Seiferle's translation of Los Heraldos Negros (so please ignore the rating) but I have read her translation of Trilce: this is much better than either of the others I have by David Smith and Clayton Eshelman, which would lead one to reasonably believe that her version of Vallejo's first work would exhibit most if not all of the same qualities: a receptive tenderness toward Poetic as opposed to Literal meanings, and, a rhythmic intuitiveness neccessary to good translation; something Mr. Eshelman is sadly lacking in his own work on this great Poet (Smith hardly bears up to any scrutiny at all, being non-poet, although well intentioned). But I did want to clarify two things for the uninitiated about Vallejo himself and this work: 1) Los Heraldos Negros did have another English Language publication, contrary to what the book review above is telling you: in 1990, by Latin American Literary Review Press (Richard Schaaf & Kathleen Ross were the translators). 2) Vallejo's Marxist beliefs are nowhere to be found in his poetry. This is the sort of thinking one associates with people who are only marginally aware of what Vallejo is trying to say and who thus confuse it with his later activities while in France (Los Heraldos Negros was composed Before the move, not after). The best advice here is to ignore Vallejo's public pronouncements at all times and concentrate instead upon his Poems; these will tell you what he actually thinking as well as why. You will also avoid the embarassment of linking it to any sort of politics or theory. Suffering is Vallejo's political affiliation, his literary theory, not the Marxism he was later drawn to because he could not bear to live in a world completely devoid of all practical hope. We should always bear this in mind when we recall his poetry: that he could not live without love (hope) and so chose to devote himself to Marxism because it seemed to him (then) as the best hope for a just future. That it was not only deepens the sweet/sad content (trilce) of his indisputably great poetry.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great English Version, October 26, 2010
This review is from: The Black Heralds (Lannan Literary Selections) (Spanish Edition) (Paperback)
Sensitive translation, very likable and subtle. The English line sounds and flows along the original like a sweet melody. It reads
more beautifully than the epic Eshelman's gritty version. The meaning of a poem by Vallejo is most times hard to get first. But his
lines are the core of feelings in Spanish poetry and Ms. Rebbeca Seiferle's version a treasure from it. With an Introduction and "Notes and Original Versions"
pages at the end of the book.
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8 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Vallejo's Language of Arrest, May 4, 2000
By 
"bunbun1" (Unites States) - See all my reviews
Readers who first encounter the militant, intellectual Vallejo stumble, as must have the first patrons of Picasso's *Guernica*, into a territory where radical politics and language consciousness cannot be divided. Famous for his revulsion at the capitalist conscious (or lack of one), Vallejo's poetry--from its most profane to its most threateningly lyrical--is an hardline education in the Marxist point of view. Middle class comfort, with its notion of safety, self-destructs on contact with Vallejo's "auroral dagger"; even in translation his verse splices the "burning coals" of the lip with the deliberate confusion of syntax and the extremities of diction.

When Vallejo proclaims "my lip/will split open into a hundred sacred petals./Tilda will hold the dagger/the flower-killing and auroral dagger!" ("Burning Coals") he places the speaker under intellectual and emotional arrest. Often with Vallejo there is no where to go but into the terrible dwellings of all experience and a life that struggles toward the new--fusing politics and romance, invention and lyric. The reader, very likely the middle class reader or writer under accusation, is faced with the impossible: syntax lures the reader into suffering. Diction becomes "a pariah's neurasthenic song," a verse of the nerve ("Leaves of Ebony"). The reader is placed on the rack of what Vallejo himself calls a "multisense of sweet unbeing" ("For the Impossible Soul of My Beloved") .

For the reader interested in poetry that works the ideals of politic and word into dangerously parabolic axes, the place to start is *The Black Heralds*. For the Marxist Vallejo with something to teach us now, the heart's language and the mind's dialectic arc into the Peruvian's "sublime parabola of love." ("For the Impossible Soul...") Perhaps Peru's greatest Modernist has something to teach us yet about the true springs of Idealism.

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