Seamus Heaney's prose poetics return repeatedly to the adequacy of poetry, its ameliorative, restorative response to the inimical reality of life in the public domain. Drawing on manuscript as well as print sources, this thesis charts the development of this central theme, demonstrating the extent to which it threads throughout the whole of Heaney's thought, from his earliest conceptual formation to his late cultural poetics. Heaney's preoccupation with this idea largely originates in his undergraduate studies where he encounters Leavis and Arnold's accounts of poetry's adequacy: its ameliorative cultural and spiritual function. He also inherits, from Romantic and modernist influences, two differing accounts of poetry's relationship to real...
Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes are major English language poets who, like others, disinter the bones o...
Taking into consideration some negative criticism of Seamus Heaney’s poetry, primarily concerning th...
This thesis deals with what it means to be a ‘public’ poet in national and transnational contex...
Seamus Heaney’s unexpected death in August 2013 brought to completion his body of work, and scholars...
Seamus Heaney explores the historical and cultural origins of his native territory. His poems link t...
This paper is no more than a preliminary survey of the poetry of Seamus Heaney, the leading poet of ...
The literal opus of Seamus Heaney is imbued with problems that range from the essence of being a con...
This article focuses on the noteworthy intellectual and artistic coherence apparent in the relations...
In one sense Seamus Heaney needs no commentators: he is the most accessible of poets, giving pleasur...
In this thesis I set out to explore Catholicism as a felt sense in Seamus Heaney’s poetry from his f...
This dissertation has two interrelated aspects. First, throughout his career, Heaney has resisted th...
This dissertation has two interrelated aspects. First, throughout his career, Heaney has resisted th...
Seamus Heaney and the Poetic(s) of Violence reconsiders the key importance of violence as an aesthet...
Being the final poem in Heaney’s 1996 collection The Spirit Level, situates the poem “Postscript” si...
Heaney\u27s poetry has grown and changed since the publication of his first collection of poetry, De...
Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes are major English language poets who, like others, disinter the bones o...
Taking into consideration some negative criticism of Seamus Heaney’s poetry, primarily concerning th...
This thesis deals with what it means to be a ‘public’ poet in national and transnational contex...
Seamus Heaney’s unexpected death in August 2013 brought to completion his body of work, and scholars...
Seamus Heaney explores the historical and cultural origins of his native territory. His poems link t...
This paper is no more than a preliminary survey of the poetry of Seamus Heaney, the leading poet of ...
The literal opus of Seamus Heaney is imbued with problems that range from the essence of being a con...
This article focuses on the noteworthy intellectual and artistic coherence apparent in the relations...
In one sense Seamus Heaney needs no commentators: he is the most accessible of poets, giving pleasur...
In this thesis I set out to explore Catholicism as a felt sense in Seamus Heaney’s poetry from his f...
This dissertation has two interrelated aspects. First, throughout his career, Heaney has resisted th...
This dissertation has two interrelated aspects. First, throughout his career, Heaney has resisted th...
Seamus Heaney and the Poetic(s) of Violence reconsiders the key importance of violence as an aesthet...
Being the final poem in Heaney’s 1996 collection The Spirit Level, situates the poem “Postscript” si...
Heaney\u27s poetry has grown and changed since the publication of his first collection of poetry, De...
Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes are major English language poets who, like others, disinter the bones o...
Taking into consideration some negative criticism of Seamus Heaney’s poetry, primarily concerning th...
This thesis deals with what it means to be a ‘public’ poet in national and transnational contex...