Ales Debeljak. Without Anesthesia: New and Selected Poems.
Pantovic, Bojana Stojanovic
Ale Debeljak. Without Anesthesia: New and Selected Poems. Andrew
Zawacki, ed. New York. Persea. 2011. xiv + 178 pages. $20. ISBN 978-0-89255-365-5
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Slovenian poet Ale Debeljak (b. 1961) belongs to the group of
prominent intellectuals and writers whose poetry--as well as critical,
theoretical, and philosophical practice--marked the former Yugoslav
cultural and literary space. The author is internationally renowned as
one of the major poets of central Europe. In the late 1980s he was the
first among the younger poets who called into question the limitations
of neo-avant-garde experimental poetics. In his early work there
prevails a hermetic, neosymbolist atmosphere, transforming traditional
lyrical forms (sonnet, terza rima, quatrain, couplets) into free verse
and later into prose poems. Debeljak's recognizable discourse of
melancholy that is founded in the poetic and philosophic articulation of
the unspoken gradually expands the focus of the lyrical subject, without
which genuine poetry could hardly survive in the framework of postmodern
literature.
The poetical device of phenomenology of memory is extremely
significant for Debeljak's aesthetics and doesn't merely imply
a thematic aspect. Without Anesthesia maintains an ongoing dialogue with
various temporal dimensions. This poetic position and attitude are
designated as "travelling poetics" that provide fullness and
simultaneous impressions, perceptions, and memories from different times
and in historical, geographical, and spatial relations. The memory thus
evokes shadows of lost things, people and places, disappeared and yet
preserved in a hidden time (Hoffmansthal, George, Rilke, Proust). It
integrates some lucid, epiphanic moments in the nostalgic narrative
voice, which is always devoted to the Other, eternally present
male-female character of Debeljak's poetry, and maybe to the most
important reader, his beloved wife.
Charles Simic wrote in the foreword to the American edition of
Debeljak's collection Anxious Moments (1994) that the poem in prose
represented an outstanding example of lyrical fusion of different genres
and lyrical practices. There's a pulsating of erotic ecstasy in the
poet's invocation of geographic areas, often very distant, which
resembles the ethereal visions of the Serbian classic Milo Crnjanski:
"After all, why sadness? Why fear? We do not know the depths of
Finnish lakes, the cold of Siberian taiga, the map of the Gobi desert.
We do not even know what's in your dreams. Mine, too. That's
the way it is." With a rich thematic register (mythic images,
sagas, and ballads), especially in the excellent introductory cycle,
"Elegies from the North," themes of exile are also
highlighted, together with themes of war and prophetic foreboding, the
collapse of values and basic heritage of civilization, followed by the
sensual confessions in the form of male-female dialogue; the atmosphere
of the metropolis opposed to the perfection of the numinous imagination,
and eternal departures and returns to Slovenia. This self-reflective
standpoint enables a strong cohesion of the mythical, historical, and
transcultural layers through the poet's personal experience, which
has always been deeply dramatized in Debeljak's poetry.
Bojana Stojanovic Pantovic
University of Novi Sad