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- Q2600521 subject Q7051898.
- Q2600521 subject Q7609980.
- Q2600521 abstract "The Dertigers, or "writers of the thirties," are a group of Afrikaans-language South African poets who achieved new heights of eloquence in the young language's early decades of the 20th century.The Dertigers arose after the Tweede Asem ("Second Breath") writers of the first decades of the 20th century; the year of 1934 is often selected as the breakthrough date for the Dertigers: W.E.G. Louw's Die ryke dwaas ("The Rich Fool") appeared in that year. The Dertigers strove to write a more emotionally intense, soul-baring poetry than their predecessors. They eschewed gentlemanliness and bourgeois convention in order to produce a more honest and intimate poetry.A further aim of the Dertigers was the effort to achieve a literary greatness that would make its mark in world literature. In an attempt to express their humanity to the fullest, the poetry of the Dertigers has a confessional quality in which the poet seems to be overheard in the midst of a prayer or confession. The resultant effect of these ambitious goals was a heightened respect for the professionalism of the poet; the choice of the precise word stood as an ever-present poetic goal. Nonetheless, the Dertigers continued to refine their language closer to the spreektaal, the "language of the people." While the descriptions of nature that characterized Tweede Asem poets remain, these depictions of the landscape are harnessed to attempts to create mood and atmosphere within the poet's own soul.1The leading figures of the Dertigers are the brothers N. P. van Wyk Louw and W. E. G. Louw, Uys Krige, and Elisabeth Eybers. Also associated with this movement are C. M van den Heever, and I. D. du Plessis.".
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q14196.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q2236474.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q2384374.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q258.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q431618.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q49757.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q5967958.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q7051898.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q7609980.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q7857485.
- Q2600521 wikiPageWikiLink Q7945487.
- Q2600521 comment "The Dertigers, or "writers of the thirties," are a group of Afrikaans-language South African poets who achieved new heights of eloquence in the young language's early decades of the 20th century.The Dertigers arose after the Tweede Asem ("Second Breath") writers of the first decades of the 20th century; the year of 1934 is often selected as the breakthrough date for the Dertigers: W.E.G. Louw's Die ryke dwaas ("The Rich Fool") appeared in that year.".
- Q2600521 label "Dertigers".