This article examines the importance of ‘Englishness’ as a thematic element in the poetry and criticism of Donald Davie (1922–1995). Beginning with a consideration of Davie’s position writing in the aftermath of the Second World War and the decline of the British Empire, the article argues that Davie capitalizes on an internationalist sensibility otherwise rejected by many of the post-war writers of the Movement with whom he was initially linked. In so doing, this article traces a tension in Davie’s writing between, on the one hand, a resistance to the parochialism and insularity he saw emerging in post-war England, particularly in the poetry of Philip Larkin, and, on the other, the affirmation of a living ‘Englishness’ that he explores thr...
This essay contextualises Shakespeare as product of a field of forces encapsulating national identi...
The present article intends to explore a delicate subject matter: whether or not the Anglo-Irish poe...
Defending the Heritage of the Language is a coded resistance to an English that is being reinvented ...
This article examines the importance of ‘Englishness’ as a thematic element in the poetry and critic...
The article presents an analysis of the marginal cultural positioning of Britsh Second World War poe...
Shaun O\u27Connell, in Thinking of England, examines the current state of purely English literat...
Bruce Dawe’s reputation as a vernacular poet can be a disadvantage. I once heard an eminent Australi...
The title of Gerald Dawe’s new collection of essays on modern Irish writing is taken from Hugo Hamil...
In 1848, the publication of Arthur Hugh Clough’s The Bothie of Tober-Na-Vuolich. A Long Vacation-Pas...
This article adds to current debates on the nature of English identity through examining some of wha...
This essay concerns the Caribbean writer’s crucial confrontation with colonial literary models. In i...
This article rethinks John Clare's connection to place, as well as the concepts of ‘place’ and ‘the ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the link in this record.T...
This article traces Tennyson’s changing relationship to the United States. The poet first associated...
This chapter develops a way to examine twentieth-century and contemporary poetry in terms of Great B...
This essay contextualises Shakespeare as product of a field of forces encapsulating national identi...
The present article intends to explore a delicate subject matter: whether or not the Anglo-Irish poe...
Defending the Heritage of the Language is a coded resistance to an English that is being reinvented ...
This article examines the importance of ‘Englishness’ as a thematic element in the poetry and critic...
The article presents an analysis of the marginal cultural positioning of Britsh Second World War poe...
Shaun O\u27Connell, in Thinking of England, examines the current state of purely English literat...
Bruce Dawe’s reputation as a vernacular poet can be a disadvantage. I once heard an eminent Australi...
The title of Gerald Dawe’s new collection of essays on modern Irish writing is taken from Hugo Hamil...
In 1848, the publication of Arthur Hugh Clough’s The Bothie of Tober-Na-Vuolich. A Long Vacation-Pas...
This article adds to current debates on the nature of English identity through examining some of wha...
This essay concerns the Caribbean writer’s crucial confrontation with colonial literary models. In i...
This article rethinks John Clare's connection to place, as well as the concepts of ‘place’ and ‘the ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the link in this record.T...
This article traces Tennyson’s changing relationship to the United States. The poet first associated...
This chapter develops a way to examine twentieth-century and contemporary poetry in terms of Great B...
This essay contextualises Shakespeare as product of a field of forces encapsulating national identi...
The present article intends to explore a delicate subject matter: whether or not the Anglo-Irish poe...
Defending the Heritage of the Language is a coded resistance to an English that is being reinvented ...