This section contains 494 words (approx. 2 pages at 400 words per page) |
Adam Kirsch writes in his review of Mysticism for Beginners that the central problem of [Zagajewski's] poetry is that the mystical experience is not loquacious because it is characterized by a stillness. Kirsch argues, What yearns to be expressed, rather, is the experience of waiting for the sudden heightening of consciousness; waiting for it, or remembering it, or lacking it. Kirsch determines that Zagajewski's goal is to write poetry that is a concrete avenue to an invisible reality, requiring him to experiment with poetic strategies and . . . poetic evasions, which reveal a great deal about the possibilities of poetry today.
Kirsch concludes that Zagajewski begins to answer the question how can a poetan intelligent, serious poetwrite mystical verse now, in a modern age when the presumption, even the suggestion, of a mystical dimension to life can seem anachronistic, an evasion of the real and secular...
This section contains 494 words (approx. 2 pages at 400 words per page) |