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Carl Wilson
In Economy of the Unlost...Carson explains that Simonides, a Greek in the fifth century BC, was perhaps the first poet to charge money for his services, notably for his epitaphs; Celan, a Jew who wrote in German, struggled with the bankruptcy of language after the Holocaust, until his suicide in 1970. Carson's question, then, is what words are really worth. Anything? Her typically canny final sentence is, "Yes and No." Poetry is a double-negative, she suggests, a way of "saying No to nothingness." What cannot be saved can perhaps be "unlost." (Her deft translations of the notoriously untranslatable Celan help underline the point.)— Toronto Globe and Mail
Overview
The ancient Greek lyric poet Simonides of Keos was the first poet in the Western tradition to take money for poetic composition. From this starting point, Anne Carson launches an exploration, poetic in its own right, of the idea of poetic economy. She offers a reading of certain of Simonides' texts and aligns these with writings of the modern Romanian poet Paul Celan, a Jew and survivor of the Holocaust, whose "economies" of language are notorious. Asking such questions as, What is lost when words are wasted? and...