The night can sweat with terror as before We pieced our thoughts into philosophy, And planned to bring the world under a rule, Who are but weasels fighting in a hole. W.B. Yeats, 'Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen' This is a book about how poetry, seen through the instance of a single poem, seeks to make sense of a turbulent and dangerous world. Poetry must introduce order and shape where there is none, and also, in certain crucial cases, remain faithful to the disorder and shapelessness of experience. Many poems manage the first of these tasks; very few manage both. W.B. Yeats 'Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen' (written and first published in 1921) is one of them. It is a work which asks what happens when what is taken to be civilization crumbles. What apocalyptic events wait in the wings? What are history's victims (and executors) to do except mock and mourn? Successive chapters investigate the six parts of the poem, connecting them to Yeats' broader poetic practice, his interest in the occult and his changing vision of Irish nationalism; to the work of other poets (Irish, English, Russian German); and to Irish and European history between 1916 (the date of the Easter Uprising in Dublin) and 1923 (the date of the end of the Irish Civil War). Theoretical considerations of the shape and meaning of violence, both political and religious, link the chapters to each other.
Is the material world an art text? This book answers these questions by examining modernist literature, especially James Joyce and W.B. Yeats, in the context of anarchist intellectual thought and Georges Sorel's theory of social myth.
certainly , the explicit consequences of a violent attitude in “ Under Ben Bulben ” ( CP 398 ) : when all words are said ... Just as no critic will ever establish Yeats's unqualified innocence in relation to the necessity of violence ...
Includes two essays: Needless Horror or Terrible Beauty: Yeats's Ideas of Hatred, War, & Violence and W.B. Yeats & the Politics of A Vision.
Molino, Michael R. “Flying by the Nets of Language and Nationality: Seamus Heaney, the “English” Language, and Ulster's Troubles.” Modern Philology 91.2 (1993): 180-201. Moloney, Karen Marguerite. Seamus Heaney and the Emblems of Hope.
"Yeats's depiction of political violence is examined through a reading of the political poetry centred on "Easter 1916," "Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen," and "Meditations in Time of Civil War," each...
This, her seventh book, continues to mine what she has termed "the meeting place between womanhood and history."
Jane Elizabeth Fisher represents a key exception in her interesting discussion of the pandemic in relationship to both Mrs. Dalloway and “On Being Ill” in Envisioning Disease, Gender, and War: Women's Narratives of the 1918 Influenza ...
subvert it'.35 Elizabeth Cullingford , in Gender and History in Yeats's Love Poetry ( 1993 ) , seeks to show how ... on the Poems of W. B. Yeats , Basingstoke : Macmillan , 1984 ; John Unterecker , A Reader's Guide to William Butler ...
To sum up, the static aesthetic emotion as understood by Joyce is born from the rhythm of beauty, which, ... Yet for Sorel science (which includes philosophical analysis) is never far from art: they are kindred modes of relating to the ...
This new edition of The Collected Poems of W.B.Yeats includes all of the poems authorised for publication by Yeats in his lifetime.