Dósa, Attila (2023) „A forradalmi költő” – Hugh MacDiarmid modernista poétikájának értelmezési kísérletei Szili József kritikai munkásságában = “The Revolutionary Poet” – József Szili on Hugh MacDiarmid’s Modernist Poetics. LITERATURA, 49 (2). pp. 212-226. ISSN 0133-2368
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Abstract
Hugh MacDiarmid, a leading figure in Scottish modernism, published his major work A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle in 1926. In his attempts to revive Scottish literature, MacDiarmid combined ideas of political nationalism with communism in his own way. The latter opened doors for him during his visit to Hungary in 1959, when he met József Szili in person. Szili later published a two-part study on MacDiarmid in Filológiai Közlöny (Philological Notes), Hungary’s foremost journal of literary criticism, and translated several of his poems. I will show how Szili’s study outlines a Marxist interpretive framework for understanding MacDiarmid’s modernist poetics, which sought to reclaim political selfdetermination and linguistic self-consciousness in Scottish poetry. I will present Szili’s translations of MacDiarmid’s poems and answer the question of how Szili’s interpretation influenced MacDiarmid’s reception in Hungary and how it fits into the critical field of contemporary Scottish MacDiarmid scholarship
Item Type: | Article |
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Additional Information: | A tanulmány előadásváltozata 2022. november 24-én hangzott el a Szili József munkásságának tiszteletére rendezett Csak ezzel, s csakis ezzel létezénk című konferencián, a Miskolci Akadémiai Bizottság székházában. |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Hugh MacDiarmid, modernism, poetry, reception history, Scotland, József Szili |
Subjects: | P Language and Literature / nyelvészet és irodalom > PN Literature (General) / irodalom általában |
SWORD Depositor: | MTMT SWORD |
Depositing User: | MTMT SWORD |
Date Deposited: | 26 Dec 2023 16:32 |
Last Modified: | 26 Dec 2023 16:32 |
URI: | http://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/183063 |
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