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29 In Belfast
Get accessElmer Kennedy-Andrews is Professor of English Literature at the University of Ulster, Coleraine. His books include The Poetry of Seamus Heaney: All the Realms of Whisper (1988), The Art of Brian Friel (1995), The Poetry of Seamus Heaney: A Reader's Guide to Essential Criticism (2000), Fiction and the Northern Ireland Troubles: (De-)Constructing the North (2003), and Writing Home: Poetry and Place in Northern Ireland 1968–2008 (2008). He has edited and contributed to critical collections on Seamus Heaney (1992), Contemporary Irish Poetry (1992), The Poetry of Derek Mahon (2002), Irish Fiction Since the 1960s (2006), Paul Muldoon (2006), and Ciaran Carson (2009). He is currently working on a study of Northern Irish Poets and America, and a book on The Jew in Irish Literature.
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Published:28 January 2013
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Abstract
In recent years, Ireland/Ulster has undergone rapid changes ranging from urbanisation to the mobility generated by new technology, the influx of foreign investment, and the growth of travel and tourism, all of which developments have eroded traditional cultural values. In Northern Ireland, Edna Longley notes that Louis MacNeice was ‘in the vanguard of absorbing Belfast into English poetry generally’. Ironically, MacNeice cites the countryside as the site of flux and Belfast as the site of stasis. Owing to his cultural complexity, his sceptical intelligence, and his insistence on the primacy of the living word over dogma and abstraction, MacNeice became a figure of special relevance to recent debates about identity and ‘home’ in Northern Ireland. A number of succeeding Northern Irish poets consider him as someone who represents a refreshing and liberating freedom from regional or national definitions of home, a radical challenge to the conventional modes of Irish poetry. In Belfast, the processes of urbanisation, globalisation, and migration have given rise to new relations between rootedness and mobility, local and global, centre and periphery.
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