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Fred D. Aguiar

    Fred D'Aguiar è un acclamato poeta, romanziere e drammaturgo la cui opera approfondisce le complessità dell'identità, della storia e della giustizia sociale. La sua scrittura, plasmata dalla sua eredità guyanese e dalle sue esperienze di vita tra Guyana, Londra e gli Stati Uniti, esplora le intricate eredità del colonialismo e della tratta transatlantica degli schiavi. Attraverso vivide narrazioni e versi potenti, D'Aguiar affronta verità scomode sul passato e sul presente. La sua voce letteraria offre profonde intuizioni sulla condizione umana, trascendendo i confini geografici e culturali.

    For the Unnamed
    The Longest Memory
    Feeding the Ghosts
    Dear Future
    Year of Plagues
    Letters to America
    • 2023

      Fred D'Aguiar's new collection connects the condition of namelessness of a famous black jockey with a present-day need to give back to those lost souls the dignity of their names.

      For the Unnamed
    • 2021

      Year of Plagues

      • 336pagine
      • 12 ore di lettura

      In this piercing and unforgettable memoir, the award-winning poet reflects on a year of turbulence, fear, and hope.

      Year of Plagues
    • 2020
    • 1998

      Feeding the Ghosts

      • 240pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      Powerful and poetic, Feeding the Ghosts is an unforgettable testimony to the struggle against oblivion, and a reminder of history overlooked and truth distorted

      Feeding the Ghosts
    • 1996

      The youngest child of a Guyanese family is accidently hit on the head with an axe, and sees the world through a strange visionary perspective. While the family plays and squabbles, an election is brewing in the capital which leads to an unexpected act of violence that destroys the family's world.

      Dear Future
    • 1995

      The Longest Memory

      • 144pagine
      • 6 ore di lettura

      From William Styron's The Confessions of Nat Turner to Toni Morrison's Beloved, modern American fiction engaged with slavery has provoked fiery controversy. So will The Longest Memory, the powerful, beautifully crafted, internationally acclaimed fictional debut of prizewinning Guyanese poet Fred D'Aguiar. In language extraordinary for its tautness and resonance, The Longest Memory tells the story of a rebellious, fiercely intelligent young slave, who in 1810 attempts to flee a Virginia plantation - and of his father who inadvertently betrays him. The young slave's love for a white girl who slakes his forbidden thirst for learning and his painful relationship with his father are hauntingly evoked in this novel of astonishing lyrical simplicity. It is a measure of D'Aguiar's achievement and bravery that The Longest Memory is informed not only by the complicities between black slave and white master but also by the tensions among slaves themselves - between stoic survivalists and passionate rebels. Remarkable for its keenness of observation, subtlety, and restraint, The Longest Memory heralds the arrival of a major new voice in the contemporary literature of the African diaspora.

      The Longest Memory