Ideograms in China

by Henri Michaux

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Allen Ginsberg called Michaux a genius, and Jorge Luis Borges said that his work is without equal in the literature of our time. Henri Michaux (1899-1984) wrote Ideograms in China as an introduction to Leon Chang's La calligraphie chinoise (1971), a work that now stands as an important complement to Ezra Pound and Ernest Fenollosa's classic study, The Chinese Written Character as a Medium for Poetry. Previously available only as a limited edition, Ideograms in China is a long, show more gorgeously illustrated and annotated prose poem containing a very deep consideration of the world's oldest living language. Poet Gustaf Sobin's luminous English version beautifully captures the astounding and strange French original. For Michaux, the Chinese culture ranked as the world's richest, a culture grounded in its written language, which bound China together through three millennia and across its enormous territories. Ideograms in China presents an oblique history of that culture through the changing variety and beauty of the ideograms: Michaux looks into a dozen scripts--from ancient bronze vessels bearing ku-wen script to running script to standard k'ai-shu characters--and the poem carries the rhythms of someone discovering the soul of a civilization in its impression of ink on paper. show less

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180+ Works 2,277 Members

Classifications

Genres
Poetry, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
841.912Literature & rhetoricFrench LiteratureFrench poetry1900-1900-1999, 20th century1900-1945
LCC
PQ2625 .I2 .I3413Language and LiteratureFrench, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese literaturesFrench literatureModern literature1900-1960
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Members
60
Popularity
513,054
Rating
½ (3.45)
Languages
English, French, Multiple languages, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
1