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Takis Sinopoulos (Pyrgos, Elis, 1917 - Athens, 1981) was a Greek poet and a leading figure among the so-called first postwar generation of Greek poets. A doctor by profession, he came of age at the beginning of perhaps the most terrible decade of Greece's recent history, running from the Metaxas dictatorship through war, occupation and the horrors of civil war, many of which he experienced at first hand.[1] These experiences, and their exorcism, inform much of his work, as did the colonels' dictatorship of 1967-1974. Alongside his poetry, he was an astute and prolific critic as well as a talented painter, and his encouragement help launch the very much younger poets who became known as the generation of the seventies.


Principal publications

No Man's Land, 1952
Songs, 1953
The Meeting with Max, 1956
Helen, 1958
Night and Counterpoint, 1959
The Song of Joanna and Constantine, 1961
The Poetry of Poetry, 1964
Deathfeast, 1972
Stones, 1972
Chronicle, 1975
The Map, 1977
The Book of Night, 1978

Translations

Landscape of Death The Selected Poems of Takis Sinopoulos, tr. K. Friar (1979) [Greek & English texts]
Selected Poems, tr. J. Stathatos (1981)

References

^ Ricks, David. "The Shadow of the Greek Civil War in the Poetry of Takis Sinopoulos", in The Greek Civil War, edited by Philip Carabott & Thanasis D. Sfikas, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2004.


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