Seamus Heaney's Regions /
"Regional voices from England, Ireland, and Scotland inspired Seamus Heaney, the 1995 Nobel prize-winner, to become a poet, and his home region of Northern Ireland provided the subject matter for much of his poetry. In his work, Heaney explored, recorded, and preserved both the disappearing agr...
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| Format: | Électronique eBook |
| Langue: | Inglés |
| Publié: |
Notre Dame, Indiana :
University of Notre Dame Press,
[2014]
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| Collection: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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| Sujets: | |
| Accès en ligne: | Texto completo |
Table des matières:
- The Development of Northern Irish Regionalism
- Recording Bigotry and Imagining a New Province: Heaney and BBC Northern Ireland Radio, 1968-73
- Heaney's Essays on Regional Writers: The 1970s
- Wounds and Fire: Northern Ireland in Heaney's 1970s Poetry
- Darkness Visible: Irish Catholicism, the American Civil Rights Movement, and the Blackness of "Strange Fruit"
- Border Crossings: Heaney's Prose Poems in Stations
- Joyce, Burns, and Holub: Heaney's Independent Regionalism in An Open Letter
- Affirming and Transcending Regionalism: Joyce, Dante, Eliot, and the Tercet Form in Station Island and The Haw Lantern
- The Northern Irish Context and Owen and Yeats
- Intertexts in The Cure at Troy
- Guttural and Global: Heaney's Regionalism after 1990
- "My Ship of Genius Now Shakes Out Her Sail": The Spirit Region and the Tercet in Seeing Things and Human Chain
- Visiting the Dead and Welcoming Newborns: Human Chain and Heaney's Three Regions.


