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A01=Kieran Quinlan
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Seamus Heaney & the End of Catholic Ireland

English

By (author): Kieran Quinlan

Seamus Heaney & the End of Catholic Ireland takes off from the poets growing awareness in the new millennium of something far more important in my mental formation than cultural nationalism or the British presence or any of that stuffnamely, my early religious education. It then pursues an examination of the full trajectory of Heaneys religious beliefs as represented in his poetry, prose, and interviews, with a briefer account of the interactive religious histories of the Irish and international contexts in which he lived. Thus, in the 1940s and 50s, Heaney was inducted into the narrow, punitive, but also enabling Catholicism of the era. In the early 1960s he was witness to the lively religious debates from the Anglican Bishop of Woolwichs Honest to God to the seismic disruptions of Vatican II. When the conflict in Northern Ireland between Catholics and Protestants broke out, Heaney was forced to dig deep for an imaginative understanding of its religious roots. From the 1980s on, Heaney more and more proclaimed his own religious loss while also recognizing the institutions residual value in an Irish society of rising prosperity, weariness with the atrocities of a partly religion-inspired IRA, and beset by the scandals of sex abuse among the clergy.

Kieran Quinlan sees Heaney as an exemplar of this period of major change in Ireland as he engaged the religious issue not only in major writers such as James Joyce, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, and Czeslaw Mi?osz, but also in a diverse array of less familiar commentators lay and clerical, creative and academic, believers and unbelievers, Irish and international. Breaking new ground by expanding the scope of Heaneys religious preoccupations and writing in an accessible, reflective, and sometimes provocative manner, Quinlans study places Heaney in his universe, and that universe in turn in its wider intellectual setting. See more
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Product Details
  • Weight: 635g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jul 2020
  • Publisher: The Catholic University of America Press
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780813232713

About Kieran Quinlan

Kieran Quinlan is a professor of English at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is the author of John Crowe Ransoms Secular Faith (1989) Walker Percy the Last Catholic Novelist (1996) and Strange Kin: Ireland and the American South (2005).

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