Prisoner of Love (book)

Prisoner of Love is Jean Genet's final book, which was posthumously published from manuscripts he was working on at the time of his death.[1] Under its French title, Un Captif Amoureux, the book was first published in Paris by Gallimard in May 1986. Translated into English by Barbara Bray and with an Introduction by Ahdaf Soueif, Prisoner of Love was subsequently published by New York Review Books.[2]

The book is a memoir of Genet's encounters with Palestinian fighters and Black Panthers. Starting in 1970, he had spent two years in the Palestinian refugee camps in Jordan. Visiting Beirut in September 1982, he found himself in the midst of the Israeli invasion of the city. He was one of the first foreigners to enter Shatila refugee camp after the massacre of hundreds of its inhabitants.[3]

According to Edmund White, "For a book about one of the most ideologically heated conflicts of modern times, Prisoner of Love is curiously cool and unpolemical."[2][4] As described by Publishers Weekly, "Part anti-Zionist tract, part memoir and philosophical discourse, this uninhibited cascade of images and associations is less a political document than a map of Genet's mental landscape."[5]

Prisoner of Love was staged as a performance piece by JoAnne Akalaitis at the New York Theatre Workshop in 1995.[6]

References

  1. Tim Keane, "Entre Chien et Loup: On Jean Genet’s Prisoner of Love", electronic book review.
  2. 1 2 Prisoner of Love page at New York Review Books.
  3. "Reading & Discussion: Jean Genet's Un Captif Amoureux (Prisoner of Love)", Alwan for the Arts.
  4. White, Edmund, "Genet's Prisoner of Love: The Evolution of a Muslim Saint", The Yale Review, January 2012, Vol. 100, Issue 1, pp. 1–9.
  5. "Prisoner of Love" review, Publishers Weekly, 30 March 1992.
  6. Ben Brantley, "THEATER REVIEW;Oblique Take on Genet And the Palestinians", The New York Times, 2 June 1995.

External links

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