Captain Cook in the Underworld - Robert Sullivan - Books - Auckland University Press - 9781869402815 - February 1, 2003
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Captain Cook in the Underworld

Robert Sullivan

Captain Cook in the Underworld

Captain Cook in the Underworld is a book-length poem by a gifted Maori poet, an archetypal exploration of Western mythology and legend as it 'discovers' itself in the South Pacific. The poem was commissioned as the libretto for a new work with composer John Psathas for the fiftieth anniversary celebration of Wellington's Orpheus Choir. Captain Cook in the Underworld offers fresh perspectives on the familiar story of Cook's Pacific explorations; it has a broad bi-cultural (European/Polynesian) frame of references; and Sullivan employs a bold risk-taking approach. The book is a highly stylised, 'operatic' account of the voyages, with similarities to the musical structure of Coleridge's Rime of the Ancient Mariner', and opera. As the poem unfolds, European myth (Orpheus, Venus, etc) has to make space for Polynesian myth (Maui, Reinga, etc). In the final pages, Cook is required after his death to face up to the damage his expeditions have inflicted on the indigenous peoples of the Pacific. This theme of European guilt and recognition will have a strong and shocking impact.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released February 1, 2003
ISBN13 9781869402815
Publishers Auckland University Press
Pages 64
Dimensions 193 × 6 × 220 mm   ·   117 g
Language English  

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