Maya C. Popa (b. 1989) is a Romanian-American writer, academic, and editor currently based in New York.
In 2018, Popa became the first woman to serve as poetry editor of Publishers Weekly, the largest international literary trade publication. She has won numerous awards in poetry, including The Hippocrates Prize, The Gregory O’Donoghue Award, The Magma Poetry Prize, The Alpine Prize, and The Narrative Poetry Prize. A former Oxford University Clarendon Scholar, her criticism has received awards from The Poetry Foundation (Chicago) and appears widely, including in the TLS, Poetry, the Poetry Review, and the London Magazine.
Her MA and PhD research focus on how heightened states of attention, induced by crises of faith and by wonder respectively, spurred Romantic and Victorian poets to generate formally innovative works. She is currently completing her PhD at Goldsmiths, where she is the recipient of an English Department Bursary Award for outstanding merit. She teaches at NYU and elsewhere.
I can’t undo all I have done to myself,
what I have let an appetite for love do to me.
I have wanted all the world, its beauties
and its injuries; some days,
I think that is punishment enough.
Maya C. Popa's poems explore the capacity of wonder to reawaken our appetite for the world, at a time that is fraught with the threat of endings, engaging lucidly with the most profound questions we face in our collective responsibilities and our relations with each other.
She writes with love and wonder of a world poised at a perilous moment: “My children, will they exist by the time / it’s irreversible?” she asks. “Will they live / astonished at the thought of ice / not pulled from the mouth of a machine?” Popa takes seriously the poet’s duty to pay attention, to seek what Seamus Heaney called “the images... adequate to our predicament”.
To read her poems is to pause again and again at the precision of imagery, breadth of ideas, and the warmth and generousness of her lyric voice. These are beautiful and profound lyric poems that will delay you, affect you, and invite you to return.
Título : Wound is the Origin of Wonder
EAN : 9781035017393
Editorial : Pan Macmillan
Edad, de : 18 años
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