![]() ![]() "Princeton University Press's new critical, annotated edition of The Age of Anxiety seeks to repair and renew contemporary readers' relationship with the poem. One of the splendid poems of our language." -M. For pessimism and naturalism and virtuosity, The Age of Anxiety makes one think of Shakespeare's Tempest." -Jacques Barzun, Harper's Magazine enormously rich in allusion, sound, and intellectual power. " The Age of Anxiety (1947), perhaps the finest of them all, tests Auden's ideas within the experience of modernity." -Lachlan MacKinnon, Times Literary Supplement The Age of Anxiety assures us that fear and lust have, in faith and purity, a cure so potent we need never know panic or be defeated by Self." -Marianne Moore, New York Times Auden a master musician of rhythm and note, unable to be dull, in fact an enchanter, under the magic of indigenous gusto. ![]() ![]() Alan Jacobs’s introduction and thorough annotations help today’s readers understand and appreciate the full richness of a poem that contains some of Auden’s most powerful and beautiful verse, and that still deserves a central place in the canon of twentieth-century poetry. This volume-the first annotated, critical edition of the poem-introduces this important work to a new generation of readers by putting it in historical and biographical context and elucidating its difficulties. Yet reviews of the poem were sharply divided, and today, despite its continuing fame, it is unjustly neglected by readers. Beginning as a conversation among four strangers in a barroom on New York’s Third Avenue, Auden’s analysis of Western culture during the Second World War won the Pulitzer Prize and inspired a symphony by Leonard Bernstein as well as a ballet by Jerome Robbins. Auden’s last, longest, and most ambitious book-length poem-immediately struck a powerful chord, capturing the imagination of the cultural moment that it diagnosed and named. When it was first published in 1947, The Age of Anxiety- W. ![]()
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