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In the Land of the Cyclops [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 350 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 205x174x34 mm, kaal: 1009 g, FULL COLOR CHAPTER HEADER ILLUSTRATIONS THROUGHOUT
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Jan-2021
  • Kirjastus: Archipelago Books
  • ISBN-10: 1939810744
  • ISBN-13: 9781939810748
  • Formaat: Hardback, 350 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 205x174x34 mm, kaal: 1009 g, FULL COLOR CHAPTER HEADER ILLUSTRATIONS THROUGHOUT
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Jan-2021
  • Kirjastus: Archipelago Books
  • ISBN-10: 1939810744
  • ISBN-13: 9781939810748
A first English-language collection by the award-winning author of Out of the World mediates the spaces between life and art in essays exploring the notebooks of Ingmar Bergman, the shadowlands of Cindy Sherman and more. Illustrations.

"In the Land of the Cyclops is Karl Ove Knausgaard's first collection of essays to be published in English. He explores art, philosophy, literature, or something as simple as a trip to the beach with his kids, with piercing candor and intelligence. Paired with full-color images throughout, his essays render the shadowlands of Cindy Sherman's photography, illuminate the depth of Stephen Gill's eye, or tussle with the inner-workings of Ingmar Bergman's workbooks. In one essay he describes the speckled figure of Francesca Woodman, arms coiled in birch bark and reaching up toward the sky - a tree. In another, he unearths Sally Mann's photographs of decomposing corpses, drawn to the point at which branches and limbs, hair and grass harmonize. Each essay bristles with Knausgaard's searing honesty and longing to authentically see, understand, and experience the world"--

From New York Times bestselling author Karl Ove Knausgaard comes a collection of ambitious, remarkably erudite essays on art, literature, culture, and philosophy.

In the Land of the Cyclops is a collection of eighteen essays by Karl Ove Knausgaard on an array of visual artists and writers, and his own private life and thoughts. Paired with full-color images, Knausgaard discusses the work of artists such as Francesca Woodman, Cindy Sherman, Anselm Kiefer, and Sally Mann, to name a few. Writing on personal experiences that range from his encounters with the Northern Lights, the birth of his daughter, trips to the beach with his four children, to his career-spanning relationship with his editor, these essays beautifully capture Knausgaard's ability to mediate between the deeply personal and the philosophical, with his trademark searing honesty and his deep longing to authentically see, understand, and experience the world.

Arvustused

". . . A modern Roland Barthes . . . Knausgaard has a gift for stopping the reader in their tracks with an unexpected, casual profundity."  Meghan O'Gieblyn, The New York Times Book Review   "...As in the fiction, [ Knausgaard's] intense focus, formidable command of reference and tendency to see the interconnectedness of things make for highly stimulating, almost overwhelming reading . . . The pantomime of critical dispassion is avoided; the rhetorical effect is one of wisdom gained rather than merely delivered." Charles Arrowsmith, the Washington Post

"Knausgaard is less interested in answers than in authentic engagement with the world . . . In the Land of the Cyclops is another worthy addition to Knausgaards oeuvre that aims to recapture this intense feeling and to see the world anew." Phillip Garland, World Literature Today

"I appreciate Knausgaard revealing his unflattering first impression, then interrogating it, his willingness to go further, to look again, and to show how his mind moves, then changes . . . I want to see what Knausgaard sees, even when Im overwhelmed by it or disagree . . . Boring down into any moment, thought, or artwork, offers its own thrilling spectacle. You dont want to look away."  Bridget Quinn, Hyperallergic

"The collection, which also includes essays on Michel Houellebecq, Cindy Sherman and Kierkegaard, reads less like a book of criticism at times than a work of negative theology, circling the mysteries of artistic creation that cannot be directly articulated: What makes a book or a painting feel alive and relevant? Why should art, which occupies the realm of pure fantasy, have any rules at all?" Stephen Poole, The Telegraph 

"Knausgaards passion for interiority and the detail of the individual experience, the most brilliant elements of his fiction, come through . . .  In the Land of the Cyclops proves that Knausgaards struggle is still ongoing, the search for truth as a balance between reality and our experience of it: This, which we perhaps could call inexhaustible precision, is the goal of all art, and its essential legitimacy."   Jessica Ferri, The Los Angeles Times

"Knausgaard argues that art is at its most effective when it destabilizes our understanding of the world...The moody, provocative black-and-white photos of Francesca Woodman reveal the constraints of our culture and what they do to our identity while Michel Houellebecqs novel Submission succeeds because it suggests how easily disillusioned people might accept political upheaval, asking What does it mean to be a human being without faith?...The throughline is the authors keen, almost anxious urge to understand the artistic mind." Kirkus Reviews

"In this . . . thought-provoking essay collection, Knausgaard once again displays his knack for raising profound questions about art and what it means to be human . . .  These wending musings will be catnip for Knausgaards fans. " -- Publishers Weekly

"Karl Ove Knausgaard explores the realm of the aesthetic where it overlaps with the quotidian in fact as he has in fiction . . . Much insight awaits any sifting through these disparate compositions . . . Knausgaard transforms the everyday into a portal of deep insight." -- John L. Murphy, Spectrum Culture 

More Praise for Knausgaard's work:     Intense and vital...Knausgaard is utterly honest, unafraid to voice universal anxieties...Superb, lingering, celestial passages...[ with] what Walter Benjamin called the "epic side of truth, wisdom."-James Wood, The New Yorker     As Jeffrey Eugenides so marvelingly put it, [ Knausgaard] broke the sound barrier of the autobiographical novel...There's something primitive and hungry in that experience-and for me, sometimes, something spiritual, close to the exprience of grace. - Charles Finch, Slate     What's notable is Karl Ove's ability, rare these days, to be fully present in and mindful of his own existence...as if the writing and the living are happening simultaneously...it immerses you totally. You live his life with him. - Zadie Smith, New York Review of Books     ...so aesthetically forceful as to be revolutionary - Jesse Barron, The Paris Review     My Struggle is a revolutionary novel that is highly approachable, even thrilling to read. The book feels like a masterpiece-one of those genuinely surprising works that alters the tradition it inherited. - Meghan O'Rourke, Bookforum     The book kept me up until two almost every morning for a week...Real and singleminded in his storytelling." - Lorin Stein, The Paris Review     Questions about precisely what fiction is and how it relates to reality and the extend to which traditional narrative can be a delivery vehicle for saying something true about life...lie at the intellectual and aesthetic heart of Knausgaard's huge undertaking. - Daniel Mendelsohn, The New York Times     Knausgaard succeeds in producing prose that is "alive"...Such transgressive blurring of the borders between the public and private, sayable and unsayable, can be both life-affirming and riveting. - The Economist     For all its complexity, My Struggle achieves something pretty simple,the thing that enduring fiction has always done: it creates a world that absorbs you utterly...[ Book Six] is alive. - Theo Tait, Sunday Times     Who'd have thought that the first monumental literary production of the 21st century...would seem, on a line-by-line basis, so modest and so raw? The books in the My Struggle series fly high by flying low, by scanning the intricate topography of everyday life. - Dwight Garner, The New York Times     This deserves to be called perhaps the most significant literary enterprise of our times. - Rachel Cusk, The Guardian     How wonderful to read an experimental novel that fires every nerve ending while summoning in the reader the sheer sense of how amazing it is to be alive, on this planet and no other. - Jeffrey Eugenides, The New York Times Book Review

Muu info

Nominated for International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.
All That Is in Heaven
3(15)
Pig Person
18(22)
Inexhaustible Precision
40(23)
Fate
63(30)
Welcome to Reality
93(13)
America of the Soul
106(40)
At the Bottom of the Universe
146(12)
Tandaradei!
158(19)
Michel Houellebecq's Submission
177(14)
Feeling and Feeling and Feeling
191(14)
Idiots of the Cosmos
205(20)
In the Land of the Cyclops
225(10)
The Other Side of the Face
235(20)
Life in the Sphere of Unending Resignation
255(19)
Madame Bovary
274(8)
To Where the Story Cannot Reach
282(32)
The World Inside the World
314(17)
Ten Years Old
331(3)
Acknowledgments 334(2)
Sources 336(2)
Art 338
Karl Ove Knausgaard was born in Norway in 1968. His debut novel Out of the World won the Norwegian Critics Prize in 2004 and his A Time for Everything was a finalist for the Nordic Council Prize. My Struggle: Book One was a New Yorker Book of the Year and Book Two was listed among the Wall Street Journal's 2013 Books of the Year. My Struggle is a New York Times Best Seller and has been translated into more than twenty languages. Knausgaard writes regularly for the New York Times Magazine. Translator Bio: Martin Aitken is the acclaimed translator of numerous novels from Danish and Norwegian, including works by Karl Ove Knausgaard, Peter Hoeg, Jussie Adler-Olsen, and Pia Juul. His translations of short stories and poetry have appeared in many literary journals and magazines. In 2012 he was awarded the American-Scandinavian Foundation's Nadia Christensen Translation Prize. In 2019 he was awarded the PEN Translation Prize for his translation of Love by Hane Orstavik, which was also a finalist for the National Book Award in 2018.