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Original scientific paper

ANIMAL, POET, MONSTER, GOD: THE BESTIARY AND BIBLICAL SOURCES IN THE POETRY OF NICK CAVE

Boris Beck ; Zagreb


Full text: croatian pdf 198 Kb

page 9-29

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Full text: english pdf 85 Kb

page 29-29

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Abstract

In his poetic texts, Nick Cave widely employs direct, indirect and derisive biblical quotations and saints, since he regards his poetry as a distinctive dialogue between Man and God. He sees God as a flight of poetic imagination, while poetic expression is a reflection of God. God is bodiless and does not meddle in the human world and can be read off as being amoral and bestial. Thanks to those characteristics, Cave introduces animals into the complex mentioned in direct biblical quotations, and also by inserting recognisable biblical motifs as conceptual metaphors. Since God is not a person, the contrast between sin and redemption is replaced by the antithesis of unimaginativeness and the imagination. For its part, imagination is beyond the scope of morals and is manifested as monstrous – while monstrosity is the polar opposite of Cave’s notion of the divine as the invisible to which only the art of words gives form.

Keywords

Nick Cave; the Bible; God; poetry; imagination; bestial; monstrous

Hrčak ID:

75084

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/75084

Publication date:

20.12.2011.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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