The Cambridge Companion to British Poetry, 1945–2010
The Cambridge Companion to British Poetry, 1945–2010 brings together sixteen essays that explore the full diversity of British poetry since the Second World War, a period of significant achievement in which varied styles and approaches have flourished. As a comprehensive critical, literary-historical and scholarly guide, this Companion offers not only new readings of a wide range of poets but a detailed account of the contexts in which their verse was written and received. Focusing on famous and neglected names alike, from Dylan Thomas to John Agard, leading scholars provide readers with insight into the ongoing importance and profundity of post-war poetry.
- Offers the most up-to-date scholarship
- Essays written by leading scholars provide a wide range of critical perspectives
- Concentrates on context rather than simply on individual poets
Reviews & endorsements
'Examining poetry from England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, and poetry written in postcolonial contexts, the essays, taken together, offer a comprehensive approach to a wide range of issues to which poets responded, including national identity, the 'movement,' migration, feminism, gender, women’s experience, postmodernism, and ecopoetics. … In sum, this collection provides valuable insights into the full diversity and wide spectrum of British poetry.' Choice
'This volume meets the high standards we expect from the Cambridge Companion series. Each contributor is an academic with expertise in the area on which they write. Each chapter is engagingly and accessibly written, providing a necessarily selective overview of the subject.' Languages and Literature
Product details
January 2016Hardback
9781107090668
310 pages
229 × 152 × 21 mm
0.56kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Poets of the forties and early fifties: the last Romantics? C. D. Blanton
- 2. The movement Patrick Deane
- 3. Survivors: modernists and thirties poets John Matthias
- 4. Beyond all this fiddle Eric Falci
- 5. Poetry and performance: the Mersey poets, the children of Albion, and performance poetry Cornelia Grabner
- 6. High late modernists or postmodernists? Simon Perril
- 7. Stretching the lyric: the metaphor men, new narrative poetry, and other ruses Natalie Pollard
- 8. Poetry and class Sandie Byrne
- 9. Northern Irish poetry Fran Brearton
- 10. Scottish poetry Alan Riach
- 11. Welsh poetry Katie Gramich
- 12. Black British poetry Sarah Lawson Welsh
- 13. Poetry, feminism, gender and women's experience Jan Montefiore
- 14. Ecopoetics Fiona Becket
- 15. Poetry and the city Peter Barry
- 16. Outward forms Jon Glover.