David Solway

David Solway (born 8 December 1941) is a Canadian poet, educational theorist, travel writer and literary critic of Jewish descent.

He is a member of the Jubilate Circle and formerly a teacher of English Literature at John Abbott College. He has spent most of his life in the Montreal area and now lives in Hudson, Quebec.

Solway is known for his work both as a poet, essayist and as a teacher, as well as for his polemical outspokenness, especially in opposition to Islam and in defense of Zionism, George W. Bush and the war on terror. He has contributed political commentary to the conservative websites WorldNetDaily and PJ Media.

For inspiration, he invented a Greek poet named Andreas Karavis as a heteronym, whose work he published in apparent translation.

Bibliography

Poetry

  • The Road to Arginos (1976)
  • Twelve Sonnets (1978)
  • Mephistopheles and the Astronaut (1979)
  • Stones in Water (1983)
  • Modern Marriage (1987)
  • Bedrock (1993)
  • Chess Pieces (1999)
  • Saracen Island: The Poetry of Andreas Karavis (as Andreas Karavis; 2000)
  • The Lover's Progress: Poems after William Hogarth (2001)
  • Franklin's Passage (2003)
  • The Pallikari Of Nesmine Rifat (as Nesmine Rifat; 2005)
  • Reaching for Clear: The Poetry of Rhys Savarin (2007) (winner of the A. M. Klein Prize for Poetry)
  • Windsurfing (2008)

Essays and criticism

  • Education Lost (1989)
  • Random Walks
  • Lying about the Wolf: Essays in Culture & Education (1997)
  • The Turtle Hypodermic of Sickenpods: Liberal Studies in the Corporate Age (2000)
  • An Andreas Karavis Companion (2000)
  • Director's Cut (2003)
  • The Big Lie: On Terror, Antisemitism, and Identity (2007)
  • Hear, O Israel! (2009)
  • Notes from a Derelict Culture (2019)
gollark: See, you should have given a copy to me so I could "safely" store it.
gollark: Windows, underscore in real reality.
gollark: It has docs, you just don't like them.
gollark: https://esolangs.org/wiki/Macron
gollark: ```pythonimport fileinputout_js = ""i = 0for line in fileinput.input(): for char in line: if char in "><+-.,[]": out_js += f"function macro{i}() {{}}\n" i += 1print(out_js)```It compiles Macron to JS.

See also

References

  • New, W. H., ed. The Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002. p. 1058.
  • Carmine Starnino, ed. David Solway, Essays on His Works (2001)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.