Podcast — Episode 81

Petrarch’s Confessional Poetry: A Conversation with A. M. Juster

A. M. Juster

Today, we welcome A.M. Juster, whose new book is Canzoniere: A New Translation, with an introduction by Andrew Frisardi (Liveright).

Listen on Apple or Spotify.

In this episode:

(1:00) Where does Petrarch fit in literary history? From the medieval to the Renaissance

(4:50) Petrarch v Shakespeare

(8:59) Confessional poetry from Petrarch to Plath and Lowell

(12:56) What is love? This is not really love poetry.

(17:45) Is Petrarch accessible to the modern reader?

(19:28) Is Petrarch difficult to translate?

(23:00) Readings from Juster’s new translation of the Canzionere:

  • 1. ‘To you who hear within these bits of rhyme’
  • 18. ‘When I return to focus on the part’
  • 118. ‘I leave my sixteenth year of sighs’

(26:21) How is time represented in Petrarch’s work? The influence of Augustine.

(30:00) The origins of this translation. The inspiration of Richard Wilbur

(39:42) Forthcoming works from A. M. Juster

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