400
700
900
Gilgamesh's snake and other poems
Gharīb, Iskandar

Gilgamesh's snake and other poems

bilingual edition

Syracuse University Press
9780815610717
| paperback
112 pages | 7 x 220 mm | en_US
Dewey 892.7/17
LC Classification PJ7938.S45 .A2 2016
LC Control No. 2015048634

Plot

The Epic of Gilgamesh is perhaps the greatest surviving work of early Mesopotamian literature. According to legend, Gilgamesh built the city walls of Uruk, modern-day Iraq, to protect his people from external threats. Although the epic records events from more than four thousand years ago, those events echo many of the social and cultural concerns of Iraq today. In this luminous bilingual collection of poems, Ghareeb Iskander offers a personal response to the epic. Iskander’s modern-day Gilgamesh is a nameless Iraqi citizen who witnessed the fall of the dictatorship, who exists in a constant state of threat, and who dreams, not about eternity, but simply about life. While Gilgamesh was searching for the elixir of life, Iskander’s hero is searching for consolation.