Imagen del autor

Carole Satyamurti (1939–2019)

Autor de Mahabharata: A Modern Retelling

11+ Obras 122 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Carole Satyamurti teaches at the Tavistock Clinic.
Créditos de la imagen: Carole Satyamurti

Obras de Carole Satyamurti

Obras relacionadas

Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama (1995) — Contribuidor, algunas ediciones929 copias
The Poetry Cure (2005) — Contribuidor — 19 copias
Modern Women Poets (2005) — Contribuidor — 13 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1939
Fecha de fallecimiento
2019-08
Género
female
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugar de nacimiento
Kent, England, UK
Lugares de residencia
London, England, UK
Ocupaciones
poet
sociologist
translator
teacher
Organizaciones
Arvon Foundation
Poetry Society (UK)
University of East London
Premios y honores
National Poetry Competition (1986)
Arts Council Writers' Award (1988)
Cholmondeley Award (2000)
Biografía breve
poet, translator and sociologist. For many years she taught at the Tavistock Clinic, where her main academic interest was in the relevance of psychoanalytic ideas to an understanding of the stories people tell about themselves, whether in formal autobiography or in social encounters. She co-edited Acquainted with the Night: psychoanalysis and the poetic imagination (2003). She won the National Poetry Competition in 1986, and a Cholmondeley Award in 2000. Countdown (2011) was her first new collection after Stitching the Dark: New & Selected Poems (2005), which drew on five collections: Broken Moon (1987), Changing the Subject (1990), Striking Distance (1994), Love and Variations (2000), and Stitching the Dark (2005), two of these Poetry Book Society Recommendations. Her translation, Mahabharata: A Modern Retelling (W.W. Norton, 2015), was joint winner of the inaugural Roehampton Poetry Prize.

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
ErichF | otra reseña | Aug 24, 2022 |
Of the English versions of this epic that I've read, this is by far my favorite.

Carole Satyamurti is a poet, not a Sanskrit scholar. Her retelling uses blank verse and modern language to wonderful effect. I couldn't put it down. The wars of succession between the Pandavas and the Kauravas is enough of a tale to grasp without all the subplots, instructive stories, and dharma lectures that make up the Mahabharata. Satyamurti whittles the 100,000 lines of the whole thing into 841 fast-moving pages that include the best of the epic's many digressions.

Satyamurti's rendering captures the spiritual dimension of events and characters (it is not only a great adventure but a religious text) without the pious language that sometimes makes other versions seem two dimensional.

I raced through this version, turned the last page, and started over again.

… (más)
1 vota
Denunciada
seschanfield | otra reseña | Mar 7, 2016 |

Premios

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Estadísticas

Obras
11
También por
3
Miembros
122
Popularidad
#163,289
Valoración
4.2
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
15

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