In this article, I read Seamus Heaney’s 2006 collection District and Circle in terms of motifs that connect many of its poems to themes of war and violence. Offering a detailed analysis of Heaney’s use of stock Holocaust imagery, or “topoi,” first introduced as such by Alain Resnais’ film essay Nuit et Brouillard (1955), the article shows how many of the poems in District and Circle contribute to the specific genre of non-victim verse about that traumatic period. Heaney shows how a historical event such as the Holocaust functions—and should function—as a constant reminder of present dangers. Referencing, directly or indirectly, precursors such as Czesław Miłosz, Paul Celan, and Joseph Brodsky, Heaney can be said to engage in the ongoing dis...
Seamus Heaney's prose poetics return repeatedly to the adequacy of poetry, its ameliorative, restora...
In my dissertation I concentrate on three modes of representation---poetry, painting and architectur...
This thesis deals with what it means to be a ‘public’ poet in national and transnational contex...
This article examines Heaney's preoccupation in District and Circle (2006) with international politi...
This thesis examines the use of the “earth” as a recurring literary motif in the poetry of Paul Cela...
This essay examines twentieth and twenty-first century responses by Irish poets to the Holocaust. It...
Poetry for Seamus Heaney has an ‘archaeological’ function. Much of Heaney’s poetry engages with the ...
Seamus Heaney and the Poetic(s) of Violence reconsiders the key importance of violence as an aesthet...
In this essay I examine the role of poetry in the production of a transnational memory of the 9/11 a...
Richard Murphy, an Irish poet, has described Seamus Heaney as “the poet who has shown the finest art...
Virgilian hauntings in the later poetry of Seamus HeaneyThis article examines the influence of Virgi...
This article examines the influence of Virgil upon the poetry of Seamus Heaney through the theoretic...
In this essay I examine the role of poetry in the production of a transnational memory of the 9/11 a...
This essay examines the imaginative use of images of the violently abused body in the writing of Sea...
This thesis aims to illustrate how poetry can be read as a genre of Cultural Memory. Specifically, i...
Seamus Heaney's prose poetics return repeatedly to the adequacy of poetry, its ameliorative, restora...
In my dissertation I concentrate on three modes of representation---poetry, painting and architectur...
This thesis deals with what it means to be a ‘public’ poet in national and transnational contex...
This article examines Heaney's preoccupation in District and Circle (2006) with international politi...
This thesis examines the use of the “earth” as a recurring literary motif in the poetry of Paul Cela...
This essay examines twentieth and twenty-first century responses by Irish poets to the Holocaust. It...
Poetry for Seamus Heaney has an ‘archaeological’ function. Much of Heaney’s poetry engages with the ...
Seamus Heaney and the Poetic(s) of Violence reconsiders the key importance of violence as an aesthet...
In this essay I examine the role of poetry in the production of a transnational memory of the 9/11 a...
Richard Murphy, an Irish poet, has described Seamus Heaney as “the poet who has shown the finest art...
Virgilian hauntings in the later poetry of Seamus HeaneyThis article examines the influence of Virgi...
This article examines the influence of Virgil upon the poetry of Seamus Heaney through the theoretic...
In this essay I examine the role of poetry in the production of a transnational memory of the 9/11 a...
This essay examines the imaginative use of images of the violently abused body in the writing of Sea...
This thesis aims to illustrate how poetry can be read as a genre of Cultural Memory. Specifically, i...
Seamus Heaney's prose poetics return repeatedly to the adequacy of poetry, its ameliorative, restora...
In my dissertation I concentrate on three modes of representation---poetry, painting and architectur...
This thesis deals with what it means to be a ‘public’ poet in national and transnational contex...