Plus: Tatiana Trouvé; Osip Mandelstam
| Today in The New York Review of Books: William Neuman assesses the cost to Venezuela’s opposition—and Venezuela—of inviting the US military to invade; Walker Mimms admires Tatiana Trouvé’s effervescent sculptures; and, from the archives, nine poems by Osip Mandelstam. The Venezuelan opposition leader courted US military intervention—but she did not get what she bargained for. The sculptor Tatiana Trouvé makes dispassionate, ironic anti-monuments using profoundly inconvenient methods of a distant past. Free from the ArchivesOsip Mandelstam was born 135 years ago today. After achieving success as a poet in Russia at a young age, in 1934 he was arrested by the NKVD for reciting a poem critical of Stalin and exiled to southwestern Russia. Four years later, during the Great Purge, he was rearrested, charged with counterrevolutionary activities, and sent to a work camp in Vladivostok, where he soon died of typhoid fever. In the Review’s December 23, 1965, issue, we published Robert Lowell and Olga Andreyev Carlisle’s translations of nine of Mandelstam’s last poems, written while he was in exile. Preserve my words forever for their aftertaste of misfortune and smoke, for their tar of collective patience and conscientious work— water in the wells of Novgorod must be black and sweetened to reflect a star with seven fins at Christmas.… New Subscriber Benefit!Subscribers are now able to share unlocked versions of our articles with friends, family, and social media channels. When signed in to your account, look for this gift box icon in any of our articles. There have been five great mass extinctions on Earth: four have been the result of carbon dioxide flooding into the atmosphere and raising the temperature. At a moment when American architecture was caught between an exhausted Modernism and a callow Postmodernism, Frank Gehry showed the way forward. You are receiving this message because you signed up for email newsletters from The New York Review. The New York Review of Books 207 East 32nd Street, New York, NY 10016-6305 |
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