Seamus Heaney and society, 1964 - 1994

<p>The contexts of Seamus Heaney's writing have been routinely noted but their critical interrogation has, to date, been limited. This thesis resituates Heaney's work to reassert the significance of his writing in its varied times and places. Its aim is to revive the web of connectio...

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Main Authors: Lavan, R, Rosie Lavan
Other Authors: O'Donoghue, B
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
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author Lavan, R
Rosie Lavan
author2 O'Donoghue, B
author_facet O'Donoghue, B
Lavan, R
Rosie Lavan
author_sort Lavan, R
collection OXFORD
description <p>The contexts of Seamus Heaney's writing have been routinely noted but their critical interrogation has, to date, been limited. This thesis resituates Heaney's work to reassert the significance of his writing in its varied times and places. Its aim is to revive the web of connections within which Heaney's work was written, published, and received, and this accounts for the "society" of the title. While the idea of society as entity remains important, the word is employed primarily as a capacious guiding principle. Society's adjective, social, is always connected: to be "social" in any sense is always to be implicated in a wider context or contexts.</p> <p>A central ambition has been to reappraise Heaney's work in relation to the situation in Northern Ireland during the three decades under consideration. A trend in criticism has been to offer reductive contextual accounts which risk depreciating the value of a historicist approach. This thesis demonstrates instead how Heaney's work is implicated in textual, cultural, and institutional networks which were themselves conditioned by the unique circumstances in Northern Ireland. It considers: the London publishing scene on which his work emerged; his relationship to Belfast mediated through television documentary; his radio work for the BBC Northern Ireland Schools Service; his relationship to Derry mediated through photography; and ideas of audience, address, and redress in his Oxford lectures. Participating in the increasingly interdisciplinary treatment of literature within and beyond Irish Studies, the literary analysis at the heart of this project is undertaken within a broader framework of cultural criticism.</p> <p>The significance of this contribution lies not solely in its acts of historical recovery, but in the critical reorientation these permit. By locating Heaney as a respondent in varied public arenas we can understand the genesis not only of his work but of the international establishment literary figure he became.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:7b179e81-f84c-4f40-961a-ed06234b9e022022-03-26T20:48:23ZSeamus Heaney and society, 1964 - 1994Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:7b179e81-f84c-4f40-961a-ed06234b9e02English Language and LiteratureEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2015Lavan, RRosie LavanO'Donoghue, B<p>The contexts of Seamus Heaney's writing have been routinely noted but their critical interrogation has, to date, been limited. This thesis resituates Heaney's work to reassert the significance of his writing in its varied times and places. Its aim is to revive the web of connections within which Heaney's work was written, published, and received, and this accounts for the "society" of the title. While the idea of society as entity remains important, the word is employed primarily as a capacious guiding principle. Society's adjective, social, is always connected: to be "social" in any sense is always to be implicated in a wider context or contexts.</p> <p>A central ambition has been to reappraise Heaney's work in relation to the situation in Northern Ireland during the three decades under consideration. A trend in criticism has been to offer reductive contextual accounts which risk depreciating the value of a historicist approach. This thesis demonstrates instead how Heaney's work is implicated in textual, cultural, and institutional networks which were themselves conditioned by the unique circumstances in Northern Ireland. It considers: the London publishing scene on which his work emerged; his relationship to Belfast mediated through television documentary; his radio work for the BBC Northern Ireland Schools Service; his relationship to Derry mediated through photography; and ideas of audience, address, and redress in his Oxford lectures. Participating in the increasingly interdisciplinary treatment of literature within and beyond Irish Studies, the literary analysis at the heart of this project is undertaken within a broader framework of cultural criticism.</p> <p>The significance of this contribution lies not solely in its acts of historical recovery, but in the critical reorientation these permit. By locating Heaney as a respondent in varied public arenas we can understand the genesis not only of his work but of the international establishment literary figure he became.</p>
spellingShingle English Language and Literature
Lavan, R
Rosie Lavan
Seamus Heaney and society, 1964 - 1994
title Seamus Heaney and society, 1964 - 1994
title_full Seamus Heaney and society, 1964 - 1994
title_fullStr Seamus Heaney and society, 1964 - 1994
title_full_unstemmed Seamus Heaney and society, 1964 - 1994
title_short Seamus Heaney and society, 1964 - 1994
title_sort seamus heaney and society 1964 1994
topic English Language and Literature
work_keys_str_mv AT lavanr seamusheaneyandsociety19641994
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