Reviews about Annemette Kure Andersen
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On
Epoch
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Annemette Kure Andersen travels a long and self-controlled path to express tenderness, but on the way she creates a cool revelation of almost magical dimensions.
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Connie Bork, Politiken 04-04-1996
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On
Epiphanies
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Something that resembles recordings contains a poeticised process of cognition. Which is not only seen but perceived through religious spectacles. The many surfaces that are described are also transcended in the book’s spirit. Without the hymn-like forms attaining a heavenly redemption.
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Erik Svendsen, Jyllandsposten 17-10-1997
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On
Fracture
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Somewhere in Søren Kierkegaard’s astonishingly fresh and interesting papers he mentions a book about the spiritual life of plants and is enthusiastic about the beautiful analogy: the chrysalis lives on the leaf – the butterfly on the flower. Perhaps it hurts the leaf to be consumed, but it is pleasant for the flower, and so this painfulness is worthwhile.
Kure Andersen’s poems also contain many flora. Moreover, they also centre on the idea that something is consumed, is destroyed, either in life or on the literary plane, but that it is worth the pain. That the beautiful mingles with the demonic.
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Peter Nielsen, Fyens Stiftstidende, 12-03-2000
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