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Introduction: Czeslaw Milosz: The Poet and His Work
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11596 |
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BOOK WORLD
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9 / 1986 |
1,528 Words |
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Accepted by the Poles, both inside the country and abroad, as Poland's foremost contemporary poet, Czeslaw Milosz was well known in European letters before he received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1980.
Central European writers have profoundly influenced the West in recent years. As a group they have captured many Nobel Prizes (one thinks of Ivo Andric, Elias Canetti, Isaac Singer, and others), and their ranks include other distinguished writers such as Milan Kundera, George Konrad, Milovan Djilas, the Danilo Kis. The prestige of this group is certainly one factor that accounts for its continuing significance.
It may be a measure of our provincialism that we speak of "Eastern Europe" when we really mean Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Romania, and Bulgaria. The peoples of that area think of themselves as Central Europeans, and this is not simply a matter of arbitrary definition or verbal fastidiousness.
Central Europeans are an important part of Western civilization. In fact, they think of themselves - again with justification-as that civilization's historic defenders. It was, after all, they who once bore the brunt of Turkish Muslim attacks on the West. And it is they who are forcibly engaged with a new anti-Western conqueror and crusading faith-Marxist-Leninist Russia.
Today Central European writers are considered in the West to be defenders not only of their own national cultures, but of Western culture and Western civilization generally. For many, they represent a last and best hope for Western Christian
... (1988 of 9107 Characters)
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