This volume is the first comprehensive study of the poetry of Bloody Sunday written by critically acclaimed Irish poets, including Seamus Heaney, Paul Muldoon, Thomas Kinsella, Seamus Deane and Medbh McGuckian.
This volume is the first comprehensive study of the poetry of Bloody Sunday written by critically acclaimed Irish poets, including Seamus Heaney, Paul Muldoon, Thomas Kinsella, Seamus Deane and Medbh McGuckian.
Kübra Özermi¿ is a postdoctoral researcher and lecturer at the University of Potsdam with a focus on Irish and English literary and cultural studies. She previously taught at Freie University Berlin and Humboldt University Berlin. Her research focus includes Irish and British fiction, Irish poetry, the Northern Irish conflict, cultural memory, masculinities, Orientalism and Romanticism. She previously published with RISE and contributed a chapter in the Routledge Companion to Sally Rooney.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Anger, Grief, and Silencing: An Introduction to the Poetry of Bloody Sunday 2. 'A Voice That Rises Directly from Below': Theorising the Poetry of Bloody Sunday 3. 'More Voices Rose. I Turned and Saw/Three Corpses Forming Red and Raw': Bloody Sunday and Its Dead in Thomas Kinsella's 'Butcher's Dozen' (1972) 4. 'My Heart Besieged by Anger, My Mind a Gap of Danger': Bloody Sunday in Seamus Heaney's 'The Road to Derry' (1972) and 'Casualty' (1979) 5. 'Death Is Our Future and Now Is Our Past': Bloody Sunday in Seamus Deane's 'After Derry, 30 January 1972' 6. Lost in Obliquity? Bloody Sunday in Paul Muldoon's Poetry 7. Medbh McGuckian's Return to Bloody Sunday: The Poetry of Bloody Sunday after the Second Inquiry
1. Anger, Grief, and Silencing: An Introduction to the Poetry of Bloody Sunday 2. 'A Voice That Rises Directly from Below': Theorising the Poetry of Bloody Sunday 3. 'More Voices Rose. I Turned and Saw/Three Corpses Forming Red and Raw': Bloody Sunday and Its Dead in Thomas Kinsella's 'Butcher's Dozen' (1972) 4. 'My Heart Besieged by Anger, My Mind a Gap of Danger': Bloody Sunday in Seamus Heaney's 'The Road to Derry' (1972) and 'Casualty' (1979) 5. 'Death Is Our Future and Now Is Our Past': Bloody Sunday in Seamus Deane's 'After Derry, 30 January 1972' 6. Lost in Obliquity? Bloody Sunday in Paul Muldoon's Poetry 7. Medbh McGuckian's Return to Bloody Sunday: The Poetry of Bloody Sunday after the Second Inquiry
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