Sounding the darkness and discovering the marvellous: hearing ‘A Lough Neagh Sequence’ with Seamus Heaney's auditory imagination
Date
2011-08-24
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Irish Studies Review
Abstract
This essay carefully analyses an important facet of T.S. Eliot's influence on Heaney, namely their shared understanding of the auditory imagination. Heaney looks to Eliot's auditory imagination to help him accomplish three vital poetic tasks: sounding the dark places of the earth, discovering a luminescence within these dark places, and inspiring poetry even when his dark surroundings threaten to silence his art. After accomplishing this analysis through close readings of a wide selection of Heaney's prose and poetry, the essay presents detailed, original readings of Heaney's neglected 'A Lough Neagh Sequence'. These readings practically illustrate the operation of Heaney's auditory imagination and the significance of his poetry's aural elements.[ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Description
This is the author accepted manuscript (post-peer review and publisher edits). The final version is published at http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cisr20/19/3#.UjMi4huKJ8E
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Keywords
IRISH poetry, POETRY (Literary form) -- History & criticism, auditory imagination, Seamus Heaney, sound patterns, ELIOT, T. S. (Thomas Stearns), 1888-1965, HEANEY, Seamus, 1939-2013
Citation
Bilbro, Jeffrey. "Sounding the darkness and discovering the marvellous: hearing 'A Lough Neagh Sequence' with Seamus Heaney's auditory imagination." Irish Studies Review 19, no. 3 (August 2011): 321-340.