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Winter Night: Selected Poems of Attila Jozsef
 
 
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Winter Night: Selected Poems of Attila Jozsef [Paperback]

Attila Jozsef (Author), John Batki (Translator)
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Book Description

July 1997
A radiant poetic body of work lies in the shadow cast by Hungarian poet Attila Jozsef's tragic suicide at 32 in 1937. In pure song-like lyrics and longer elegiac poems, Jozsef inscribed not only his own sad fate but that of millions in an Eastern Europe that was only nominally "between the wars" during the '20s and '30s of our century. His poetics informed by Marx and Freud--the intellectual icons of his times--Jozsef's brooding passions break through the barriers of poverty and alienation, and transcend conditions that are local and historical. This selection places special emphasis on the deeply resonant late works dating from 1935-37.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Batki has done a superb job: the translations demonstrate again and again just how contemporary Jozsef's work remains" -- Authors' Review of Books

"Jozsef's words are shock therapy for the new millennium: angry, sad, hopeful, mystic, holy, epic, heroic, humble, disturbed" -- Rain Taxi

Product Details

  • Paperback: 127 pages
  • Publisher: Oberlin College Press (July 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0932440789
  • ISBN-13: 978-0932440785
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.9 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,183,882 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Captures the Language and Soul of a Great Hungarian Poet, July 5, 2006
This review is from: Winter Night: Selected Poems of Attila Jozsef (Paperback)
When I think of great Hungarian poets whose works can stand the trials of translation, and have a reason to be read outside of Hungary, among the first is Attila Jozsef.

American readers of Sylvia Plath will connect with the deeply personal style intoned with tragedy, all ominous, intimate and distant simultaneously. Fans of Walt Whitman and Maya Angelou will hear resonating the tension of the inner life exposed into metered words, although they both saw more hope in life.

Jozsef's curriculum vitae is included as an introduction this English translation of his most important poems. It serves not only as a short biography, but also as a look into why Jozsef became the poet we know. As a CV, its purpose was to apply for a job at a bank, but, in light of his suicide 10 months later, it allows the reader to peer into the make up of an artist, who, in the matter of brilliance in opposition to a disturbing mental condition, might be compared to Vincent Van Gogh. It is suspected he suffered from schizophrenia, for which treatment was not well-developed.

With the CV, there is an annotated timeline, from Jozsef's April 11, 1905 birth to his violent suicide under a train December 3, 1937.

Different translations exist of Attila Jozsef, but this one holds its own. Oft-translated is "With a Pure Heart" which caused him much trouble, getting him kicked out of university in 1925. It begins:

"I am fatherless, motherless,
godless and countryless,
have no cradle, no funeral shroud,
and no lover to kiss me proud."

He follows with three more stanzas that is both defiant and despondent. He gives up while shouting his goodness, but not as a savior like Christ, but as a wasted soul.

In other poems, he looks but never sees the light at the end of the tunnel. As a young communist where communism was illegal, he met strong oppression. Ironically, it is the Communists who would later take control of Hungary a few years after Jozsef's death and twist and oppress Hungarians into economic and spiritual failure. In 1937, he wrote "Long Ago," which is filled with existentialism dissatisfied with the emptiness it offered. He wanted a god, but believed in none.

"Long Ago"

"Long ago I realized
I'm amphibious like a frog
that lies low at the bottom
of raging skies. This poem
is a bubble of my anxious soul

"I have no evil masters and
no worms await my command.
Like fish and gods I survive
in oceans and heavens alike.

"My ocean is the murky world
of gentle, warm embracing arms.
My heaven is the clear light
of humanity conceived by the mind."

The translator, John Batki, shows a close similarity between many of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg's work with Jozsef's work some 20 years earlier. While the Beats were more of experimenters of a Buddhist philosophy, and not practitioners in a strict sense, the relationship poetically presents the transcendent nature of Jozsef.

Like the Beats, Jozsef's work was rebellious, but with more introspective depth. The struggle of his Hungarian countrymen after WWI and his own desire to stand and speak aloud informs his poems, much in the way America's Carl Sandburg or Chile's Pablo Neruda, both contemporaries of Jozsef.

He seeks and declares his identity, themes that still ring today. If he sang in a grunge band, he might have been Kurt Cobain. Instead, he was Attila Jozsef, a great Hungarian poet, and these are his greatest poems.

I fully recommend "Winter Night: Selected Poems" by Attila Jozsef as translated by John Batki.

Anthony Trendl
editor, HungarianBookstore.com
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Solemn peasants in the fields straggle homeward without a word. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
goodnight little one, attila józsef, seventh one
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