Book contents
- Race in Irish Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in Irish Literature and Culture
- Race in Irish Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Editors’ Note
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 “Our Heroic Ancestors”
- Chapter 2 Racializing Irish Historical Consciousness
- Chapter 3 Race, Minstrelsy, and the Irish Stage
- Chapter 4 Race and Irish Women’s Novels in the Long Nineteenth Century
- Chapter 5 Blackface Minstrelsy, Irish Modernism, and the Histories of Irish Whiteness
- Chapter 6 Joyce’s Racial Comedy
- Chapter 7 W. B. Yeats, the Irish Free State, and the Rhetoric of Race Suicide
- Chapter 8 “Ulster’s White Negroes”
- Chapter 9 Learning from Walcott
- Chapter 10 Race, Irishness, and Popular Culture in Australia
- Chapter 11 White Nationalism and Irish America
- Chapter 12 Diasporic Afterlives
- Chapter 13 “Dubh”
- Chapter 14 Split Selves and Double Consciousness in Recent Irish Fiction
- Chapter 15 Race, Place, and the Grounds of Irish Geopolitics
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 9 - Learning from Walcott
Heaney’s Black and Green Atlantic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 January 2024
- Race in Irish Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in Irish Literature and Culture
- Race in Irish Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Editors’ Note
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 “Our Heroic Ancestors”
- Chapter 2 Racializing Irish Historical Consciousness
- Chapter 3 Race, Minstrelsy, and the Irish Stage
- Chapter 4 Race and Irish Women’s Novels in the Long Nineteenth Century
- Chapter 5 Blackface Minstrelsy, Irish Modernism, and the Histories of Irish Whiteness
- Chapter 6 Joyce’s Racial Comedy
- Chapter 7 W. B. Yeats, the Irish Free State, and the Rhetoric of Race Suicide
- Chapter 8 “Ulster’s White Negroes”
- Chapter 9 Learning from Walcott
- Chapter 10 Race, Irishness, and Popular Culture in Australia
- Chapter 11 White Nationalism and Irish America
- Chapter 12 Diasporic Afterlives
- Chapter 13 “Dubh”
- Chapter 14 Split Selves and Double Consciousness in Recent Irish Fiction
- Chapter 15 Race, Place, and the Grounds of Irish Geopolitics
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Caribbean poet and playwright Derek Walcott was an early and heretofore relatively unrecognized exemplar for Seamus Heaney, who began reading Walcott in the 1960s and continued engaging with his work his entire career. Walcott’s example enabled Heaney to realize that he could be true to his mixed and multiple linguistic, cultural, literary, and political inheritances, and further, that dwelling amongst such identities could be a position of poetic strength. This essay shows how Walcott confirmed Heaney’s penchant for memorializing historical atrocities committed against members of minority communities across the “Black and Green Atlantic.” At the same time, Walcott’s nuanced poetry modeled how Heaney might enrich and complicate his poetry of witness by seeking rapprochement with such perpetrators through registering their common humanity through their local language. Walcott’s poetic integrity thus influenced Heaney’s continuing attempts to draw on the divisive conflict in Northern Ireland by exploring how literature might not linger on the wound of racialized resentment but finally transcend that situation and ascend into a condition akin to Walcottian song.
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- Race in Irish Literature and Culture , pp. 190 - 204Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024