This section contains 2,589 words (approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Harkins, William E. “The Czech Nobel Laureate Jaroslav Seifert.” World Literature Today 59, no. 2 (spring 1985): 173-75.
This brief but comprehensive introductory essay provides an overview of the works and career of Jaroslav Seifert and offers commentary on why Seifert is deserving of the Nobel Prize despite a lack of recognition in the West.
The award of the 1984 Nobel Prize in Literature to the aging Czech poet Jaroslav Seifert naturally raised many questions—hardly new ones. The Nobel Committee of the Swedish Academy has demonstrated a striking preference for lyric poetry in recent years, a preference that the reading public scarcely shares. At least five prizewinners from the past eighteen years have been poets, not counting Seifert himself. The award to Pablo Neruda in 1971 reminds us parenthetically that this Chilean poet had taken his unusual (but somehow Spanish-sounding) pen name from Seifert's great countryman, Jan Neruda (1834-91), who, unfortunately...
This section contains 2,589 words (approx. 9 pages at 300 words per page) |