“Anyone who walks the streets of Montreal knows just how present Leonard Cohen is. His visage enfolds the city, reminding us about all the ways he transcended politics to seek something spiritual, something aesthetically sustaining. This new collection captures Cohen’s historic cultural impact, but it also defines the myriad ways in which he was always contemporary. Anyone who wants to understand Cohen’s influence and the trajectory of his writing will need this book. Its perceptive introduction helps to frame the evolution of Cohen’s multi-faceted career. It offers a rich conversation among some of the most accomplished critics writing about Cohen today.” —Robert Lecker, McGill University “The Contemporary Leonard Cohen presents readers with a kaleidoscope of perspectives, illuminating the multifaceted richness of Cohen's body of work, from his earliest writings to the posthumously released productions. Ultimately, our own stance as scholars, artists, and fans of Cohen’s texts, in which we are so often directly addressed, is challenged, making this volume relevant not only to those interested in Leonard Cohen but also to anyone seeking to understand the dynamics of artistic communication.” —Francis Mus, Ghent University | University of Antwerp

The Contemporary Leonard Cohen is an exciting new study that offers an original explanation of Leonard Cohen’s staying power and his various positions in music, literature, and art.

The death of Leonard Cohen received media attention across the globe, and this international star remains dear to the hearts of many fans. This book examines the diversity of Cohen’s art in the wake of his death, positioning him as a contemporary, multi-media artist whose career was framed by the twentieth-century and neoliberal contexts of its production. The authors borrow the idea of “the contemporary” especially from philosophy and art history, applying it to Cohen for the first time—not only to the drawings that he included in some of his books but also to his songs, poems, and novels. This idea helps us to understand Cohen’s techniques after his postmodern experiments with poems and novels in the 1960s and 1970s. It also helps us to see how his most recent songs, poems, and drawings developed out of that earlier material, including earlier connections to other writers and musicians.

Philosophically, “the contemporary” also sounds out the deep feelings that Cohen’s work still generates in readers and listeners. Whether these feelings are spiritual or secular, sincere or ironic, we get them partly from the sense of timeliness and the sense of timelessness in Cohen’s lyrics and images, which speak to our own lives and times, our own struggles and survival. From a set of international collaborators, The Contemporary Leonard Cohen delivers an appreciative but critical examination of one of our dark luminaries.

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Essay collection on Leonard Cohen's work organized by the concept of ‘the contemporary’, which helps to explain Cohen's staying power and existential depth. The chapters offer related but diverse perspectives - historical, artistic, spiritual - on his songs, poems, novels, and drawings, and examine how Cohen's different types of art fit together.
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  • Introduction: The Contemporary Leonard Cohen - Kait Pinder and Joel Deshaye
  • “A Man Must Be Very Alone”: The Contemporary as the Outsider
  • “I Desire Only Your Love by the Telling”: Alienation and Authenticity in “A Ballet of Lepers” and The Favourite Game - Laura Cameron and Claudine Gélinas-Faucher
  • Leonard Cohen, Marianne Ihlen and Hydra’s Summer of Love - Tanya Dalziell and Paul Genoni
  • Untimely Meditations: Critical History in Flowers for Hitler - Kait Pinder
  • Is It Really Revolting? Towards an Ethics of Loss in Leonard Cohen’s Beautiful Losers and Dionne Brand’s In Another Place, Not Here - Gregory Betts
  • After “THE DACHAU GENERATION”: Contemporaries in Song
  • Fame, Failure, and Redemption: Leonard Cohen and His Contemporaries - Norman Ravvin
  • Gossip, Rumour, and Relationship: Learning Leonard Cohen from Joni Mitchell - Joel Deshaye
  • “I Undid Your Gown”: Rhyming Decorum in the Lyrics of Leonard Cohen - Brian Laidlaw
  • “A Song the People Loved was Written by a Thief”: Cohen’s Songs of Revolt - Patrick Nickleson
  • “Desire the Horse / Depression the Cart”: Feeling Contemporary
  • “I’ve Seen the Future, Baby: It is Murder”: The Apocalypse in Leonard Cohen’s Pop Theology - Christophe Lebold
  • The Humble One: A Polyptych of Self-Portraits in Book of Longing and The Flame - Joan Angel
  • “Memory White from Loss of Guilt”: Guilt and Detachment in the Early Cohen - Brian Trehearne
  • Ways to Say Goodbye: Valedictions in Book of Longing - Paul Robichaud
  • Conclusion: “A Brief Elaboration”: Fan-Scholars and Cohen Studies - Joel Deshaye and Kait Pinder
  • Contributors
  • Kait Pinder, Acadia University, Wolfville, NS
  • Joel Deshaye, Memorial University, St. John's, NFLD
  • Laura Cameron, Toronto, ON
  • Claudine Gélinas-Faucher, Québec City
  • Tanya Dalziell, University of Western Australia, Perth
  • Paul Genoni, Curtin University, Perth
  • Gregory Betts, Brock University, St. Catharine's ON
  • Norman Ravvin, Concordia University, Montréal
  • Patrick Nickleson, Queen's University, Toronto
  • Brian Laidlaw, University of Denver, Boulder
  • Christophe Lebold, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg FR
  • Joan Angel, Independent, Quebec
  • Brian Trehearne, McGill University, Montreal
  • Paul Robichaud, Albertus Magnus College, New Haven
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    Produktdetaljer

    ISBN
    9781771125611
    Publisert
    2023-11-30
    Utgiver
    Wilfrid Laurier University Press
    Vekt
    363 gr
    Høyde
    229 mm
    Bredde
    152 mm
    Aldersnivå
    P, 06
    Språk
    Product language
    Engelsk
    Format
    Product format
    Innbundet
    Antall sider
    384

    Biografisk notat

    Kait Pinder is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English and Theatre at Acadia University. Her recent work has appeared in Canadian Literature, Studies in Canadian Literature, and The University of Toronto Quarterly.

    Joel Deshaye is a professor at Memorial University. His move to the East Coast stimulated his writing of The American Western in Canadian Literature (forthcoming from the University of Calgary Press). His first book was The Metaphor of Celebrity: Canadian Poetry and the Public, 1955-1980 (2013), which focused partly on Cohen.