I'd like to understand the Poisson bracket for fermions in classical field theory defined on a cylinder (with coordinates $(t,x)$, $x$ being the compact direction) and propagating on $T^n$ with constant metric $G_{ij}$ (though $T^n$ probably isn't important to the discussion here).
The action is $$S = \frac{i}{4\pi}\int dt dx \,\,G_{ij} \left[ \psi^i(\partial_t + \partial_x)\psi^j + \bar{\psi}^i(\partial_t - \partial_x)\bar{\psi}^j\right] .$$
From this how can I give a general definition of the Poisson bracket? Some constraints on it should be the following:
It should be symmetric (since in the bosonic case it's anti-symmetric).
I should be able to recover the standard relation $$\{\psi^i(t,x), \psi^j(t,x') \}_{PB} = -2\pi i G^{ij}\, \delta(x-x')$$ from it.
One definition which seems to work is $$\{F,G\}_{PB} = -2\pi i \int dx\,\, G^{ij}\Big(\frac{\delta F }{\delta \psi^i } \frac{\delta G}{\delta \psi^j} + \frac{\delta F }{\delta \bar{\psi}^i } \frac{\delta G}{\delta \bar{\psi}^j}\Big).$$
However, if this is right, I'd like to see why on more general grounds.
Also one particular Poisson bracket I'm interested in computing is $\{(\partial_t - \partial_{x_1})\psi^i(x_1), \psi^j(x_2)\}$ which I get from the above definition to be $2\pi i \frac{\partial}{\partial x_1} \delta(x_1 - x_2)$. Is this sensible?
Edit: for reference, I'm looking at Appendix A in the following paper by Kapustin and Orlov:
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0010293
and trying to verify the Poisson Brackets in eqn. (48).