The Terracotta Army

In 1985, Gary Geddes won the Commonwealth Poetry Prize, Americas Region, for The Terracotta Army, a brilliant sequence of his Chinese sonnets. The nine-couplet poems were inspired by his 1981 visit to the archaeological site in China where more than 8,000 individually sculpted, life-sized soldiers and horses were interred in the third century to accompany Emperor Ch’in Shi Huang Di into the afterlife.

In this ideologically charged volume, Geddes gives voice to a few soldiers, who engage in myriad debates about the abuse of power, the yin-yang dance of narrative and silence, and the sanctity of the idiosyncratic self in the face of conformity.

This new edition of The Terracotta Army, published to coincide with the Canadian tour of The Warrior Emperor and China’s Terracotta Army, opening at the ROM in late June 2010, pairs Geddes’ poems with photographs of the terracotta soldiers.

Reviews

This stunning sequence of poems was inspired by a visit to the archaeological site of the terracotta warriors — more than 8,000 individually sculpted, life-sized soldiers and horses interred in 210 BC to accompany Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of China, into the afterlife.

In this ideologically charged volume, Geddes gives voice to twenty-five of these compelling figures. They engage in debates about the abuse of power, the yin-yang dance of narrative and silence, and the sanctity of the idiosyncratic self in the face of conformity. Together, they form a marvelous history of the Qin dynasty.


“Geddes’s accessible poetic style brings to life a rich array of characters inspired by a blend of history, culture, myth, and imagination. … his two most recent collections offer the reader a point of entry into the inner workings of old China by bringing to life a thronging diversity of voices tinged with both creativity and lore. … In The Terracotta Army, art has the power to write humanity into existence and yet, in Geddes’s grounded and lyrical world, it is ultimately as delicate and frail.”
Canadian Literature

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In 1985, Gary Geddes won the Commonwealth Poetry Prize, Americas Region, for The Terracotta Army, a brilliant sequence of his Chinese sonnets. The nine-couplet poems were inspired by his 1981 visit to the archaeological site in China where more than 8,000 individually sculpted, life-sized soldiers and horses were interred in the third century to accompany Emperor Ch’in Shi Huang Di into the afterlife.

In this ideologically charged volume, Geddes gives voice to a few soldiers, who engage in myriad debates about the abuse of power, the yin-yang dance of narrative and silence, and the sanctity of the idiosyncratic self in the face of conformity.

This new edition of The Terracotta Army, published to coincide with the Canadian tour of The Warrior Emperor and China’s Terracotta Army, opening at the ROM in late June 2010, pairs Geddes’ poems with photographs of the terracotta soldiers.

Reader Reviews

Details

Dimensions:

64 Pages
8in * 6in * 0.1575in
118gr

Published:

July 30, 2010

Publisher:

Goose Lane Editions

ISBN:

9780864926340

9780864928160 – PDF

Book Subjects:

POETRY / Canadian

Featured In:

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Language:

eng

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