The brilliant Aztec poetic tradition would have all but vanished after the Spanish Conquest in 1521 without the friars who painstakingly transcribed and preserved the poems in the years that followed. In this new edition of their translations, Edward Kissam and Michael Schmidt - two poets who spent formative years in Mexico - give us powerful echoes of the lyrical and philosophical songs, the songs of rejoicing, sorrow, ritual and war, the laments made by Nezahualpilli and others as the end of their empire approached, and the epics of myth and legend. Their introduction is a distilled account of the background to the Aztec empire, its way of life and its fall, to the role of poetry in Aztec life and to how the poems were preserved.
About the AuthorMichael Schmidt FRSL, poet, scholar, critic and translator, is the founder-director of Carcanet Press and 'PN Review'. He studied at Harvard and Wadham College, Oxford before settling in England. He lives in Manchester. Edward Kissam studied at Princeton University and Magdalen College, Oxford. He works at JBS International on a variety of applied research issues related to education in developing countries. He is the author (with David Griffith) of 'Working Poor: Farmworkers in the United States'. He lives in California.
Book InformationISBN 9780856464232
Author Edward KissamFormat Paperback
Page Count 160
Imprint Anvil Press PoetryPublisher Carcanet Press Ltd