Vittoria Colonna: Selections from the Rime Spirituali with Photographs of Josep Maria Subirachs' Passion Façade

(Author) (Photographer)
Backorder
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$16.95  $15.76
Publisher
Porcupine's Quill
Publish Date
Pages
64
Dimensions
5.59 X 8.91 X 0.28 inches | 0.27 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780889843707

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author

Jan Zwicky is a poet, philosopher and musician whose work is often cited for its intense lyricism. She studied philosophy at the University of Calgary, then earned her Ph.D. at the University of Toronto, and subsequently taught at a number of North American universities. She is a prolific essayist and the author of a dozen books, including Lyric Philosophy and Wisdom & Metaphor. Her poetry has won the Governor General's Award (Songs for Relinquishing the Earth, 1998), the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize (Robinson's Crossing, 2004), and numerous other accolades. Originally from the prairies, Zwicky now lives on Quadra Island, British Columbia.

Robert Moody is a mathematician whose professional life has revolved around the mathematics of symmetry and long-range order. Moody studied mathematics at the University of Saskatchewan and the University of Toronto, before joining the faculty at the University of Saskatchewan and, later, the University of Alberta. He is internationally recognized for his co-discovery of what are known as the Kac-Moody algebras, one of the significant advances in mathematics in the latter half of the twentieth century. His enduring pursuit of black and white photography, with its emphasis on simplicity, form and abstraction, is a visual complement to his mathematics. He is a winner of the Wigner Medal and is an Officer of the Order of Canada. He makes his residence in Victoria, British Columbia.

Reviews

"The raw honesty and power of sixteenth century poet shines through in Zwicky's translations."

Jan Zwicky presents her translations of ten sonnets from Vittoria Colonna's "Rime Spirituali," accompanied by stunning photographs by Robert Moody, in "Vittoria Colonna: Selections from the Rime Spirituali."

Colonna is not a well-known figure. She was a wealthy sixteenth-century woman who sought the refuge of the convent after she was prematurely widowed. She wrote other forms of poetry, but her later years were marked by meditative religious poems, which came to be known as her rime spirituali. Colonna was an intriguing woman who associated with religious reformers and was a close friend of Michelangelo's.

Zwicky, who says she came upon Colonna's work accidentally, has selected ten of the more than one hundred sonnets that make up Colonna's published "Rime Spirituali." While this might not seem a very high ratio, and the book may not satisfy completists for that reason, Zwicky has chosen well. From the first words of the first sonnet, the raw honesty and power of Colonna's lines is striking:

"All the while my widowed love / flushed me with thoughts of literary fame, / it fed a serpent in my breast / and now, afflicted, languishing, / my only remedy is God."

As this quotation makes clear, these are free verse sonnets, and for this reason, Zwicky calls them versions rather than translations. Even for those who, like Zwicky, don't share Colonna's Christian background, this and other poems serve as moving ruminations by a person in search of something more than what she sees around her. For those inclined to investigate the source text, each sonnet is featured in the original Italian opposite its translation.

The other piece of this partnership of words and images is Moody's collection of photographs. The ten images don't directly correspond to the subjects of these poems, but rather serve an overall purpose of placing the reader deeper into the spiritual world Colonna was surrounded by. The photos show scenes from Josep Maria Subirachs's Passion Fa?ade, part of the exterior of the basilica of the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona. Moody, a mathematician as well as a photographer, captures the controversial, heavily angled sculptures' dramatic lines in black and white photographs that perfectly utilize shadow and light.

Zwicky and Moody's collaboration doesn't have much weight in the traditional sense?lacking in heft, the book can be read in less than an hour. But in another sense, the book's weight is tremendous; in these short translations, one gains a unique and deeply personal insight into the mind of a woman both haunted and liberated by her beliefs.--Peter Dabbene "ForeWord Reviews "

Zwicky's motives in pursuing this fifteenth century poet's work were, as she says, out of "purely intellectual and artistic curiosity." I for one, am glad she followed her nose on this one. Colonna's sonnets are a devotional treasure worth unearthing in this poker-faced, indifferent secular age.'--Sally Ito "The Winnipeg Review "