W. R. Rodgers
Author : Darcy O'Brien
Publisher : Bucknell University Press
Page : 108 pages
File Size : 31,37 MB
Release : 1970
Category : Ireland
ISBN : 9780838776308
Author : Darcy O'Brien
Publisher : Bucknell University Press
Page : 108 pages
File Size : 31,37 MB
Release : 1970
Category : Ireland
ISBN : 9780838776308
Author : Anthony Bradley
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 456 pages
File Size : 12,46 MB
Release : 1980-01-01
Category : Poetry
ISBN : 9780520033894
Author : A. Trevor Tolley
Publisher : McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Page : 446 pages
File Size : 27,40 MB
Release : 1985
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780886290283
Author : Gregory A. Schirmer
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Page : 445 pages
File Size : 36,53 MB
Release : 2019-05-15
Category : Poetry
ISBN : 150174481X
The first book of its kind, Out of What Began traces the development of a distinctive tradition of Irish poetry over the course of three centuries. Beginning with Jonathan Swift in the early eighteenth century and concluding with such contemporary poets as Seamus Heaney and Eavan Boland, Gregory A. Schirmer looks at the work of nearly a hundred poets. Considering the evolving political and social environments in which they lived and wrote, Schirmer shows how Irish poetry and culture have come to be shaped by the struggle to define Irish identity. Schirmer includes a large number of accomplished poets who have been unjustly neglected in standard accounts of Irish literature; many of these writers are women, whose work has been kept in the shadows cast by that of well-known male poets. He also emphasizes the importance of political poetry in a country that continues to be torn by sectarian violence. With its rich selection of poetic voices, Out of What Began reveals the political, social, and religious diversity of Irish culture.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 1502 pages
File Size : 15,74 MB
Release : 1897
Category : United States
ISBN :
Author : Gillian McIntosh
Publisher :
Page : 264 pages
File Size : 28,41 MB
Release : 1999
Category : History
ISBN :
Gillian McIntosh examines the complexity of meanings and values associated with Northern Irish State since 1920 in this study that begins during the decade after World War 1 and concludes with the elaborate civic ritual of the Queen's visit in 1953.
Author : Clair Wills
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 231 pages
File Size : 45,80 MB
Release : 2015-02-09
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1107048400
Clair Wills's The Best Are Leaving is a study of representations of Irish emigrant culture and of Irish immigrants in Britain.
Author : Tom Walker
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 225 pages
File Size : 37,94 MB
Release : 2015-09-17
Category : Literary Collections
ISBN : 019106243X
This study focuses on Louis MacNeice's creative and critical engagement with other Irish poets during his lifetime. It draws on extensive archival research to uncover the previously unrecognised extent of the poet's contact with Irish literary mores and networks. Poetic dialogues with contemporaries including F.R. Higgins, John Hewitt, W.R. Rodgers, Austin Clarke, Patrick Kavanagh, John Montague, and Richard Murphy are traced against the persistent rhetoric of cultural and geographical attachment at large in Irish poetry and criticism during the period. These comparative readings are framed by accounts of MacNeice's complex relationship with the oeuvre of W.B. Yeats, which forms a meta-narrative to MacNeice's broader engagement with Irish poetry. Yeats is shown to have been MacNeice's contemporary in the 1930s, reading and reacting to the younger poet's work, just as MacNeice read and reacted to the older poet's work. But the ongoing challenge of the intellectual and formal complexity of Yeats's poetry also provided a means through which MacNeice, across his whole career, dialectically developed various modes through which to confront modernity's cultural, political and philosophical challenges. This book offers new and revisionary perspectives on MacNeice's work and its relationship to Ireland's literary traditions, as well as making an innovative contribution to the history of Irish literature and anglophone poetry in the twentieth century.
Author : Rachel Buxton
Publisher : Oxford University Press, USA
Page : 236 pages
File Size : 10,25 MB
Release : 2004-05-27
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN : 0199264899
In this incisive and highly readable study, Rachel Buxton offers a much-needed assessment of Frost's significance for Northern Irish poetry of the past half-century. Drawing upon a diverse range of previously unpublished archival sources, including juvenilia, correspondence, and drafts of poems, Robert Frost and Northern Irish Poetry takes as its particular focus the triangular dynamic of Frost, Seamus Heaney, and Paul Muldoon. Buxton explores the differing strengths which eachIrish poet finds in Frost's work: while Heaney is drawn primarily to the Frost persona and to the "sound of sense", it is the studied slyness and wryness of the American's poetry, the complicating undertow, which Muldoon values. This appraisal of Frost in a non-American context not only enables a fullerappreciation of Heaney's and Muldoon's poetry but also provides valuable insight into the nature of trans-national and trans-generational poetic influence. Engaging with the politics of Irish-American literary connections, while providing a subtle analysis of the intertextual relationships between these three key twentieth-century poets, Robert Frost and Northern Irish Poetry is a pioneering work.
Author : Stephen Martin Leake
Publisher :
Page : 1492 pages
File Size : 31,3 MB
Release : 1912
Category : Contracts
ISBN :