Seamus Heaney and Catholicism
Seamus Heaney and Catholicism makes extensive use of unpublished material to offer fresh insights into Heaney's complex engagement with Catholicism. Gary Wade explores how Catholicism operates in ways other than social and political, which have largely been the focus of critics up until now. Using extensive unpublished material, including early drafts of some familiar poems, it offers close readings which explore how Catholicism operates at the level of feeling, and how it continued to have an emotional purchase on Heaney long after he had left behind orthodox practice. It also engages with Heaney's increasing concern, in his later work, with the loss of a metaphysical sensibility, and his turning to the Roman poet Virgil to deal with questions of death and post-mortem existence. The book concludes by arguing that Heaney's Catholicism is displaced rather than rejected, and that his vision expands to accommodate both the Christian and the Classical worlds.
- The first study of Heaney and Catholicism which pays attention to a close reading of select poems to illustrate the formative presence of Catholicism in all of Heaney's collections
- Uses interviews with Heaney and his critical writings
- Engages with unpublished archival material from Dublin, London and Emory
Product details
April 2025Adobe eBook Reader
9781009541381
0 pages
Not yet published - available from April 2025
Table of Contents
- Introduction: Seamus Heaney and Catholicism
- 1. Innerspaces of an early life: family, school and parish
- 2. Renewing the ordinary: death of a naturalist, door into the dark, wintering out
- 3. 'Pining for ceremony': north, field work, the haw lantern
- 4. 'Habit's afterlife': Station Island
- 5. 'Things beyond measure': seeing things, the spirit level, electric light
- 6. 'Well-water far down': district and circle, human chain
- Afterword: 'love with weeping'
- Works cited.