A Culture of Kinship and Place: the poetry of Sorley Maclean - in: Green Voices: Understanding Contemporary Nature Poetry

A Culture of Kinship and Place: the poetry of Sorley Maclean - in: Green Voices: Understanding Contemporary Nature Poetry

Author
Terry Gifford
Publisher
Critical, Cultural and Communications Press
Language
English
Edition
2
Year
2017
Page
11
ISBN
1905510292,9781905510290
File Type
pdf
File Size
3.7 MiB

This text seeks to discover what different notions of nature actually underlie contemporary poetry, and how they relate to traditional assumptions about "nature" in the poetry of Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England. It also asks what new contributions to British nature poetry have been made by Black and Asian poets, by women and radical green poets. The author argues that the traditions of Pope and Goldsmith are continued in the present day by the likes of R.S. Thomas, George Mackay Brown, John Montague and Norman Nicholson. Patrick Kavanagh and others work in an "anti-pastoralist" tradition of Crabbe and Clare. Defining a "post-pastoral" poetry are Seamus Heaney, the successor to Wordsworth, and Ted Hughes, successor to Blake. In Scotland, Sorley Maclean's poetry has taken Gaelic nature poetry into the age of the nuclear threat. A chapter examining the attitudes towards the environment of 16 contemporary poets concludes the book.

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