Επιτάφιος

by Γιάννης Ρίτσος

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On 10 May 1936 the 27-year old Greek poet Yiannis Ritsos saw a newspaper photograph of a woman weeping over the body of her son, a Thessaloniki tobacco-factory worker killed by police during a strike. Two days later the Communist Party newspaper Rizo

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Author Information

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194+ Works 772 Members
Ritsos, imprisoned by the Greek dictatorship, has repeatedly suffered from his strong revolutionary sentiments: "Haunted by death, driven at times to the edge of madness and suicide, Ritsos throughout his life has been upheld by his obstinate faith in poetry as redemption, and in the revolutionary ideal" (Friar, Modern Greek Poetry). Initially a show more follower of the demotic tradition, Ritsos went through a phase of militant, doctrinaire poetry. Eventually, however, his work became free of anger and recrimination. In long poems, such as Romiosyne (1947), he writes compassionately, celebrating life in an unadorned style. He has produced dozens of volumes of poems, drama, and translations. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Poetry
DDC/MDS
889.132Literature & rhetoricClassical & modern Greek literaturesModern Greek literaturePoetry1500-1821
LCC
PA5629 .I7 .E6513Language and LiteratureGreek language and literature. Latin language and literatureByzantine and modern Greek literatureIndividual authors
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