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Derek Mahon: A Retrospective [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 304 pages, height x width: 239x163 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Oct-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Liverpool University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1835537979
  • ISBN-13: 9781835537978
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 152,25 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 304 pages, height x width: 239x163 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Oct-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Liverpool University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1835537979
  • ISBN-13: 9781835537978
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
"Derek Mahon (1941-2020) is widely recognized as one of the most important Irish poets of his generation. This collection of new critical essays offers an important retrospective assessment of the nature of his poetic achievement. Bringing together many leading scholars of modern and contemporary Irish poetry, including a notable number of accomplished poet-critics, its contributors range widely across Mahon's body of work. Their essays offer fresh considerations of the biographical, geographical and literary contexts that shaped his poetic voice. This includes paying attention not only to more familiar influences but also to previously little considered interlocutors. The stylistic and formal achievement of his voice is re-evaluated in ways that range from attentive close readings to considerations of his controversial practice of self-revision, and his engagements with music and experiments in translation. The politics of a poet often misleadingly considered apolitical are also reframed to take in the engagements of his early work through to the ecocritical commitment of his later poetry. Indeed, a notable aspect of this book is the consideration it gives to all the phases of Mahon's career. As a whole, the collection opens up many new ways of reading and understanding Mahon's important body of work"--

Recenzijas

'The 18 contributors to this collection of essays bring the poetry alive, not that there was a danger of it being forgotten. Throughout the volume, the level of respect for the author is apparent in the meticulous scholarship. The late Gerald Dawe takes us on an illuminating tour of Mahons Belfast. Lucy McDiarmid tracks the circuits of the poet in Manhattan in the 1990s (and makes manifest the coherence of The Hudson Letter). Relationships with music, painting, politics, class, and French and American poetries are each illuminated by people with true expertise.' Adrian Frazier, Irish Times

Introduction

Nicholas Grene and Tom Walker

I. Affiliations

Mahon, Coleridge, Yeats: The Given Life

Matthew Campbell

Hold on to that dissolving map: Places and Displacements in Mahon and
MacNeice

Eiléan Nķ Chuilleanįin

The Mighty Four and More: Mahon and American Poetry

Philip Coleman

Vivid Contact: Good Faith in the Poetry of Mahon and Boland

Catrķona Clutterbuck

Mahon and Morrissey: The Thing and the Thing Made

Lucy Collins

II. Locations

A Worldly Time: Mahon and Belfast

Gerald Dawe

Mahons New York

Lucy McDiarmid

Mahons Cosmopolitan Limits

Justin Quinn

III. Aesthetics

Mahons Defence of Poetry

Edna Longley

Twinning Infinite with Fulfilment: Rhyme and the Paradoxes of Choice in
Mahons Early Poetry

Adam Hanna

Late Listening: Music in Mahons Poetry

Maria Johnston

Surfaces and Superficialities in Mahon

Gail McConnell

From France to la Francophonie: Mahons Translation of Unbelonging

Clķona Nķ Riordįin

IV. Politics

Towards the New Atlantis: Mahons Early Politics

Tom Walker

Mahons Class Unease

Nicholas Grene

Mahons Late Sacramental Gleam

Seįn Hewitt

songs to be sung beyond the human: Mahons Terminal Ecologies

Sam Solnick

Late Mahon: Resistance and the Medium

Hugh Haughton
Nicholas Grene is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at Trinity College Dublin. Tom Walker is Associate Professor in Irish Writing at Trinity College Dublin.