33 research outputs found
'In vreemd en beeldschoon ruisen' : wat stijl zegt over thematiek : Een huis om dakloos in te zijn (1981)
In dit hoofdstuk uit het Luuk Gruwez Handboek wordt de derde poëziebundel Een huis om dakloos in te zijn (1981) van Gruwez geanalyseerd en als scharnierbundel gesitueerd in het vroege oeuvre van de dichter. Aandacht gaat naar de betekenis van de titel, de terugkerende thema's, de karakteristieken van de stijl en de receptie in de literaire kritiek. Ook de selectie van gedichten uit de bundel in bloemlezingen uit zijn poëzie (onder andere door hemzelf samengesteld), evenals de redactionele wijzigingen en volledige omwerkingen van sommige gedichten komen uitgebreid aan de orde
Rutger Kopland (1934-2012)
This chapter gives an overview of the life and word of the Dutch well known poet Rutger Kopland (1934-2012). The themes and stylistic characterics as wel as the evolution and variation of his poetry are closely looked at and situatied in the Dutch literary context of that era and combined with the respons by critics and the public. Everyone of his of his fourteen poetry collections are commented in chronological order
'Al wat ik kreeg van kunde' : Hubert van Herreweghen : bijna een eeuw lyrisch meesterschap
The enduring poetic genius of Hubert van Herreweghen (1920-2016) reveals a distinct consistency around what are essentially contrasts, namely darkness, desolation, the imminency of death and mortality, along with the burden of sin and guilt, juxtaposed against lightness, a sense of wonder about the small things in life and the feeling of being absorbed into a vast timeless whole. Even though his Christian mindset fed both ends of the spectrum, there was a remarkable shift in Van Herreweghen’s coherent oeuvre. Whereas the poet first composed mainly dark and very formal verses, his work gradually grew to reveal more light-heartedness, more self-irony, more joyful stillness and also more experiments with form. In this contribution, the coherence and shift within his poetry are illustrated by the poem ‘Toestand’ (from the collection Webben en wargaren, published in 2009), where he draws on a dramatic war experience in 1940. Only in 2002 did a first five-line version see the light of day, which was subsequently kept in his poetic archives until 2004, when the poem acquired its definitive (seven-line) form. The genesis of ‘Toestand’ shows how the biographical context of 1940 was abstracted, allowing several levels of meaning to materialise, not least the existential-religious, cosmic and poetic one. The poem also showcases the linguistic delight and the play on words that have come to epitomise Van Herreweghen’s poetry. ‘Toestand’, written in the latter half of his poetic career, is at the same time a textbook example of what at the start of his career the poet described as his poetic motto: ‘modern unrest poured into a traditional metered verse’ (1950)