International audienceThis paper explores the poetry of Sinéad Morrissey (born in Portadown, Northern Ireland, in 1972), one of the most highly regarded of the younger generation of contemporary Irish poets. Taking into account her six collections to date – including There Was Fire in Vancouver (1996), The State of the Prisons (2005), Parallax (2013) and On Balance published in 2017, it examines the great variety of poetical strategies – analogy, metaphor, polysemy, play on form and perspective, pictorialism and iconicity, ekphrasis, etc. – that Morrissey uses to tell of most personal experiences (physical pain, exile, loss, pregnancy and motherhood, confrontation with forms of otherness, states of imprisonment, creation) and the wide range...
Drawing on existential phenomenology, particularly Heidegger's analytic of Dasein, and combining it ...
The poetry of Pearse Hutchinson weds ideas and lyricism, in Irish and in English, while utilising hi...
Mary Morrissy (Dublin, 1957) belongs to the generation of womenwriters excluded from the Field Day A...
International audienceThis paper explores the poetry of Sinéad Morrissey (born in Portadown, Norther...
This article is a sustained profile and study of prominent Northern Irish poet Sinead Morrissey's co...
This article attempts to investigate the potential resonances between Paul Ricoeur’s and Julia Krist...
This paper attempts to look at what may be considered as the singularity of the Northern Irish ident...
International audienceIn Parallax (2013), her most recent collection of poems, Sinéad Morrissey is a...
Opulence and opaqueness, emptiness and brea(d)th seem to be the media characteristic of, respectivel...
As Julie Bates claims, the most exciting new writing in Ireland is happening in the field of nonfict...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF DAVID KELLY, for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in ENGLISH, pre...
En accès libre à l'adresse suivante : http://etudesirlandaises.revues.org/2602National audienceThis ...
Desmond Egan's poetry, which deliberately departs from all established prosodie patterns, is a song ...
Heinrich Böll's and Michel Déon's journeys to Ireland, part of a tradition of literary exchanges bet...
The works of Oscar Wilde form a link between late Victorian and modernist literature. His art and wi...
Drawing on existential phenomenology, particularly Heidegger's analytic of Dasein, and combining it ...
The poetry of Pearse Hutchinson weds ideas and lyricism, in Irish and in English, while utilising hi...
Mary Morrissy (Dublin, 1957) belongs to the generation of womenwriters excluded from the Field Day A...
International audienceThis paper explores the poetry of Sinéad Morrissey (born in Portadown, Norther...
This article is a sustained profile and study of prominent Northern Irish poet Sinead Morrissey's co...
This article attempts to investigate the potential resonances between Paul Ricoeur’s and Julia Krist...
This paper attempts to look at what may be considered as the singularity of the Northern Irish ident...
International audienceIn Parallax (2013), her most recent collection of poems, Sinéad Morrissey is a...
Opulence and opaqueness, emptiness and brea(d)th seem to be the media characteristic of, respectivel...
As Julie Bates claims, the most exciting new writing in Ireland is happening in the field of nonfict...
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF DAVID KELLY, for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in ENGLISH, pre...
En accès libre à l'adresse suivante : http://etudesirlandaises.revues.org/2602National audienceThis ...
Desmond Egan's poetry, which deliberately departs from all established prosodie patterns, is a song ...
Heinrich Böll's and Michel Déon's journeys to Ireland, part of a tradition of literary exchanges bet...
The works of Oscar Wilde form a link between late Victorian and modernist literature. His art and wi...
Drawing on existential phenomenology, particularly Heidegger's analytic of Dasein, and combining it ...
The poetry of Pearse Hutchinson weds ideas and lyricism, in Irish and in English, while utilising hi...
Mary Morrissy (Dublin, 1957) belongs to the generation of womenwriters excluded from the Field Day A...