Kostas Karyotakis

Kostas Karyotakis (Greek: Κώστας Καρυωτάκης) (October 30, 1896, Tripoli, Greece July 20, 1928, Preveza, Greece) was a Greek poet considered one of the most representative Greek poets of the 1920s and one of the first poets to wrote about modernism in Greece. His poetry conveys a great deal of nature imagery and traces of expressionism and surrealism. The majority of Karyotakis' contemporaries viewed him in a dim light; after his suicide, however, it was considered by many that he was indeed a great poet. He had a minor but significant influence on later Greek poets. His father's occupation as a county engineer resulted in Karyotakis changing homes frequently in his youth. During his childhood he lived in many locations in Greece, including Argostoli, Lefkada, Larisa, Kalamata, Athens and Chania. He started publishing poetry in various magazines for children in 1912. After receiving his degree from the Law School of Athens, he became a clerk in the Prefecture of Thessaloniki. However, he greatly disliked his work and couldn't accept the bureaucracy of the state, which he wrote about often in his poems. His prose text "Catharsis" ('purification') is characteristic of this. For this reason he was removed from his posts often and transferred to other locations in Greece. During these removals he became familiar with the boredom and misery of the country during the unpleasant times around World War I. In February of 1919 he published his first collection of poetry: The Pain of Man and Things, which was largely ignored or badly criticized by the critics. In the same year he published with his friend Agis Levendis a satirical magazine called The Leg, which despite its success was banned by the police after the sixth issue. In 1921 he published his second collection called Nepenthe. At that time he began having an affair with the poet Maria Polydouri who was his colleague at the Prefecture of Attica. In 1924 he traveled abroad, visiting Italy and Germany. In December 1927 he published his last poetry collection: Elegy and Satires. In February 1928, Karyotakis was transferred to Patra and in June 1928 to Preveza. From there he sent desperate letters to friends and relatives describing the misery he felt in the town. His angst is felt in the poem Preveza which he wrote shortly before his suicide. On the 20th of July he went to Monolithi and tried for ten hours to drown in the sea, but failed in his attempt. In the subsequent morning he returned home and left again to purchase a revolver and went to a little coffee shop. After smoking for a few hours, he went to a nearby seashore called Agios Spyridon and there, under an eucalyptus, shot himself in the head. His suicide letter was found in his pocket.

External link

Karyotakis, Kostas Karyotakis Karyotakis, Kostas

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
impossible man
royal montreal golf club
jim crockett promotions
transferrin
dharamsala
universidad del norte
crotalaria
viscount chetwynd
starman (tv series)
christopher daniel barnes
viscount boyne
viscount gage
double album
chronicles (paleoconservative)
viscount galway
three days of the condor
riel rebellion
viscount powerscourt
viscount ashbrook
viscount southwell
viscount de vesci
az (rapper)
ssliop
viscount lifford
constellation records
viscount bangor
giop
viscount doneraile
arameans
viscount harberton
j. edward snyder
viscount hawarden
csiv2
maithili language
seciop
miguel indurin
frank rizzo
help america vote act
constitutional democratic party
jonathan hunt
jonathan hunt (united states)
california unemployment statistics
1942 (video game)
fred noonan