
This study focuses on Louis MacNeice's creative and critical engagement with other Irish poets during his lifetime. It draws on extensive archival research to uncover the previously unrecognised extent of the poet's contact with Irish literary mores and networks. Poetic dialogues with contemporaries including F.R. Higgins, John Hewitt, W.R. Rodgers, Austin Clarke, Patrick Kavanagh, John Montague, and Richard Murphy are traced against the persistent rhetoric of cultural and geographical attachment at large in Irish poetry and criticism during the period. These comparative readings are framed by accounts of MacNeice's complex relationship with the oeuvre of W.B. Yeats, which forms a meta-narrative to MacNeice's broader engagement with Irish poetry. Yeats is shown to have been MacNeice's contemporary in the 1930s, reading and reacting to the younger poet's work, just as MacNeice read and reacted to the older poet's work. But the ongoing challenge of the intellectual and formal complexity of Yeats's poetry also provided a means through which MacNeice, across his whole career, dialectically developed various modes through which to confront modernity's cultural, political and philosophical challenges. This book offers new and revisionary perspectives on MacNeice's work and its relationship to Ireland's literary traditions, as well as making an innovative contribution to the history of Irish literature and anglophone poetry in the twentieth century.
This study investigates the extent of Louis MacNeice's creative and critical engagement with the Irish literary landscape and his contemporaries throughout his career. Tom Walker, an academic researcher, utilizes extensive archival materials to re-evaluate MacNeice's position within Irish poetry. The work argues that MacNeice maintained a complex, dialectical relationship with W.B. Yeats and other Irish poets, which served as a primary mechanism for his navigation of modernity's philosophical and political challenges.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this text as a significant contribution to the history of twentieth-century Irish literature and the study of anglophone poetry. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the archival research provided by the author.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
019106243X
ISBN-13:
9780191062438
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