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Author:
Lloyd, David, 1955 December 20- author. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJkxJpxrtb4747yjYbYMfq
Title:
Counterpoetics of modernity : on Irish poetry and modernism / David Lloyd.
Publisher:
Edinburgh University Press,
Copyright Date:
2022
Description:
ix, 219 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Subject:
1800-2099
English poetry--History and criticism.--History and criticism.
English poetry--History and criticism.--20th century--History and criticism.
American poetry
European poetry
Irish poetry
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Literary criticism.
Critiques litteĢraires.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 202-212) and index.
Contents:
Introduction: Counterpoetics and Colonial Modernity -- Part I: Spectres of Modernity. Overture: The Burden of Discontinuity: Criticism, Colonialism and Anti-Modernism -- Crossing Over: On James Clarence Mangan's "Spirits Everywhere" -- 1913-1916-1919: Yeats's Dates -- 'To Live Surrounded by a White Song', or, The Sublimation of Race in Experiment: On the Margins of Susan Howe -- Part II: New Things That Have Happened. New Things That Have Happened: Forms of Irish Poetry -- Intricate Walking: Scully's Livelihood -- Rome's Wreck: Joyce's Baroque -- Conclusion: Conduits for the Humane: Walsh's Optic Verve.
Summary:
"This study puts contemporary Irish poetry in dialogue with major debates and concerns of European and American poetics. David Lloyd tracks the traits of Irish poetic modernism, from fragmentation to the suspicion of representation, to nineteenth-century responses to the rapid and unsettling effects of Ireland's precocious colonial modernity, such as language loss and political violence. He argues that Irish poetry's inventiveness is driven by the need to find formal means to engage with historical conditions that take from the writer the customary certainties of cultural continuity, identity and aesthetic or personal autonomy, rather than by poetic innovation for its own sake. This reading of Irish poetry understands the innovative impetus that persists through Irish poetry since the nineteenth century as a counterpoetics of modernity. Opening with chapters on Mangan and Yeats, the book then turns to detailed discussions of Trevor Joyce, Maurice Scully, and Catherine Walsh; major Irish contemporary poets never before the focus of a book-length study." -- Provided by publisher
ISBN:
1474489818
9781474489812
147448980X
9781474489805
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1305905453
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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