The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Poetry
This is the first book to take political devolution as an organising context for the presentation and discussion of main currents in contemporary Scottish poetry. The book combines thematic chapters with in-depth analysis of key poets writing in English, in Gaelic and in Scots, to address the central issues raised in work that is responding to changes in the socio-economic and political environment over recent decades: the influence of tradition (both national and international); the question of language; the rise of women's writing; the relationship between poetry and politics; and the importance of place to the Scottish imagination. The chapters demonstrate a broad range of interests, while also offering detailed analysis of the many ways writers broach their subject matter; including close readings of poetry by Edwin Morgan, Kenneth White, Aonghas MacNeacail, Kathleen Jamie, John Burnside, Robin Robertson, Mick Imlah and Don Paterson, among others. Chapters by practicing poets and by academics deliver senses of the current range and quality of poetry in Scotland.Key Features*A thorough guide to contemporary Scottish poetry and poets, making the book an ideal course text *Reflects the ways in which the work of Scottish poets reflects a radical cultural independence following Devolution*Provides authoritative essays by the leading experts in the field*Includes a valuable synoptic bibliography
"1101966843"
The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Poetry
This is the first book to take political devolution as an organising context for the presentation and discussion of main currents in contemporary Scottish poetry. The book combines thematic chapters with in-depth analysis of key poets writing in English, in Gaelic and in Scots, to address the central issues raised in work that is responding to changes in the socio-economic and political environment over recent decades: the influence of tradition (both national and international); the question of language; the rise of women's writing; the relationship between poetry and politics; and the importance of place to the Scottish imagination. The chapters demonstrate a broad range of interests, while also offering detailed analysis of the many ways writers broach their subject matter; including close readings of poetry by Edwin Morgan, Kenneth White, Aonghas MacNeacail, Kathleen Jamie, John Burnside, Robin Robertson, Mick Imlah and Don Paterson, among others. Chapters by practicing poets and by academics deliver senses of the current range and quality of poetry in Scotland.Key Features*A thorough guide to contemporary Scottish poetry and poets, making the book an ideal course text *Reflects the ways in which the work of Scottish poets reflects a radical cultural independence following Devolution*Provides authoritative essays by the leading experts in the field*Includes a valuable synoptic bibliography
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The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Poetry

The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Poetry

The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Poetry

The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Poetry

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$36.95 
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Overview

This is the first book to take political devolution as an organising context for the presentation and discussion of main currents in contemporary Scottish poetry. The book combines thematic chapters with in-depth analysis of key poets writing in English, in Gaelic and in Scots, to address the central issues raised in work that is responding to changes in the socio-economic and political environment over recent decades: the influence of tradition (both national and international); the question of language; the rise of women's writing; the relationship between poetry and politics; and the importance of place to the Scottish imagination. The chapters demonstrate a broad range of interests, while also offering detailed analysis of the many ways writers broach their subject matter; including close readings of poetry by Edwin Morgan, Kenneth White, Aonghas MacNeacail, Kathleen Jamie, John Burnside, Robin Robertson, Mick Imlah and Don Paterson, among others. Chapters by practicing poets and by academics deliver senses of the current range and quality of poetry in Scotland.Key Features*A thorough guide to contemporary Scottish poetry and poets, making the book an ideal course text *Reflects the ways in which the work of Scottish poets reflects a radical cultural independence following Devolution*Provides authoritative essays by the leading experts in the field*Includes a valuable synoptic bibliography

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780748636266
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 07/03/2009
Series: Edinburgh Companions to Scottish Literature
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.60(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Dr Matt McGuire Convenor (English Major) at the School of Humanities and Communication Arts at the University of Western Sydney. He has published widely on both Scottish and Irish Literature and he is the author of The Essential Guide to Contemporary Scottish Literature (2008). His work has appeared in the Edinburgh Review, Scottish Studies Review and The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Literature (2007).

Colin Nicholson is Professor of Eighteenth-Century and Modern Literature at Edinburgh Universitywhere he teaches a course in Modern and Contemporary Scottish Poetry. During the 1990s he edited the British Journal of Canadian Literature, and is the author of Edwin Morgan: Inventions of Modernity (2002), and Fivefathers: Interviews with Late Twentieth-century Scottish Poets (2007).

Table of Contents

Introduction Feeling Independent, Matt McGuire and Colin Nicholson; 1. The Poetics of Devolution, Alan Riach; 2. Scottish Women's Poetry since the 1970s, Fiona Wilson; 3. Contemporary Poetry in Scots, Tom Hubbard; 4. Contemporary Gaelic Poetry, Niall O'Gallagher; 5. A Democracy of Voices , Kirsten Matthews; 6. Recent Scottish Poetry, Colin Nicholson; 7. Edwin Morgan, Matt McGuire and Colin Nicholson; 8. Kenneth White and John Burnside, Marco Fazzini; 9. Aonghas MacNeacail, Peter McKay; 10. Kathleen Jamie, Matt McGuire; 11. Kenneth White, Cairns Craig; 12. Don Paterson, Alan Gillis; Further Reading;Notes on Contributors; Index.
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