Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Seamus Heaney
View through CrossRef
«An admirable undertaking, as impressive for its scholarship as its sympathy. Heaney is presented here at the centre of a worldwide network of correspondents, and what emerges is a vivid sense of both the great writer and the living man.»
(Seamus Perry, Fellow of Balliol College and Tutor in English Literature, Professor of English, University of Oxford)
«I just finished reading it. I found it very touching; Heaney’s influence on such a wide circle of correspondents comes through with great force.»
(Professor Marc Mulholland, Senior Tutor, St Catherine’s College, Oxford)
Seamus Heaney wrote hundreds of letters and postcards in long hand, answering almost all the letters he received from friends, fellow poets, university professors, arts councils and of course from ordinary fans. He was not only a master of English prose and poetry, but was also highly skilled in the art of writing letters.
The author has selected fragments and parts of this vast correspondence to show how we can see the portrait of the man himself from the way in which he interacted with others.
Peter Lang Verlag
Title: Seamus Heaney
Description:
«An admirable undertaking, as impressive for its scholarship as its sympathy.
Heaney is presented here at the centre of a worldwide network of correspondents, and what emerges is a vivid sense of both the great writer and the living man.
»
(Seamus Perry, Fellow of Balliol College and Tutor in English Literature, Professor of English, University of Oxford)
«I just finished reading it.
I found it very touching; Heaney’s influence on such a wide circle of correspondents comes through with great force.
»
(Professor Marc Mulholland, Senior Tutor, St Catherine’s College, Oxford)
Seamus Heaney wrote hundreds of letters and postcards in long hand, answering almost all the letters he received from friends, fellow poets, university professors, arts councils and of course from ordinary fans.
He was not only a master of English prose and poetry, but was also highly skilled in the art of writing letters.
The author has selected fragments and parts of this vast correspondence to show how we can see the portrait of the man himself from the way in which he interacted with others.
Related Results
Seamus Heaney’s Hopkins
Seamus Heaney’s Hopkins
Critics have often located Seamus Heaney’s response to Gerard Manley Hopkins within Heaney’s early poetry, but Heaney never fully escaped from Hopkins’s influence; he looked early ...
Seamus Heaney and Society
Seamus Heaney and Society
Abstract
Seamus Heaney and Society presents a comprehensive and dynamic new engagement with the work of one of the most celebrated poets of the modern period. In app...
Speaking Truth to Power
Speaking Truth to Power
A recurrent feature in the last two decades of Seamus Heaney’s literary career was his immersion in classical, particularly Hellenic culture, which in itself sprang from a longstan...
Exemplary Readership in Heaney’s Prose
Exemplary Readership in Heaney’s Prose
Abstract
This chapter traces the importance that ideas of exemplarity hold in Heaney’s prose. Heaney’s prose helps reveal the significance of exemplarity as a catego...
Heaney and Hesiod
Heaney and Hesiod
Heaney acknowledges an affinity with the farmer-poet, the source of a literary tradition which is inspired but rooted: rural and provincial rather than courtly, urban, or cosmopoli...
Misremembering Seamus Heaney
Misremembering Seamus Heaney
This chapter assesses the work of Seamus Heaney, another semiautobiographical poet whose work nevertheless presses on the boundaries of fact. Heaney's poetry often raises the quest...
The Exemplary Seamus Heaney
The Exemplary Seamus Heaney
Abstract
Chapter 2 assesses the longstanding critical controversies surrounding Heaney’s negotiation of the concepts of public and private, political and aesthetic, ...
‘Weird Brightness’ and the Riverbank
‘Weird Brightness’ and the Riverbank
This chapter begins with a reading from a Virgilian perspective of the third section of the title poem from Heaney’s Seeing Things (1991): here, the poet gives an account of his ow...

