New essay collection: Yeats and Asia: Overviews and Case Studies Edited by Seán Golden, Cork University Press
The association of Yeats with Asia
suggests references to Byzantium, Theosophy, the influence of Mohini
Chatterjee, Occultism, Rabindranath Tagore or the Upanishads, Nōh theatre,
masks or his fugitive use of Zen koans, and the gyres as a version of Yin and
Yang. Yeats made explicit references to Asian matters in his works, like the
Buddha in ‘The Statues,’ as well as implicit references that might be evident
to Asian readers but otherwise opaque, like the ‘polished mirror’ in Per Amica
Silentia Lunae.
There is also the vexed and vexing question of ‘Asia’ itself’. For the ancient
Greeks it was the far shore of the Aegean Sea, the opposite and ‘Other’ of
their own ‘Europe,’ long before Edward Said called attention to the
implications and consequences of ‘Orientalism’. Many experts doubt that Yeats
‘correctly’ understood the Asian cultural references that he cherry-picked for
his own purposes. Others doubt that it really mattered, since he turned
everything he touched to his own idiosyncratic use anyway. These essays revisit
the roles of West, South and East Asia in his work and revise the theoretical bases
that have been applied to his use of Asia in the past.
Seán Golden, now retired, directed the East Asian
Studies & Research Centreat the Autonomous University of Barcelona in
Spain
September 2020 | 9781782053972 | €39 £35| Hardback
|234 x 156mm| 398 pages
https://www.corkuniversitypress.com/Yeats-and-Asia-p/9781782053972.htm