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Overcoming influence: the writing of Seamus Heaney
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Overcoming influence: the writing of Seamus Heaney
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Identifier
Thesis
2183
Author
Morgan, Aidan P., 1965-
Title
Overcoming
influence
: the
writing
of
Seamus
Heaney
Publisher
Central Connecticut State University
Date
2011
;
*
Resource Type
Master's Thesis
Notes
Politics
in the
North
of
Ireland
deserves
a
paper
all
its
own
. To
attempt
to
condense
the
political
situation
in the
North
in a
few
short
chapters
is
to
try
and
distill
the
essentials
. In
such
a
location
,
politics
becomes
more
than an
argument
, or a
different
point
of
view
on how
rules
are
implemented
.
Politics
is
what
one
becomes
born
into; the
“us”
and
“them”
mentality
roots
itself
at
birth
and
becomes
almost
impossible
to
break
from.
Everything
in
politics
has an
historical
understanding
, the
interpretation
of
which
complicates
the
discussion
. The
uniqueness
of a
place
like
Northern
Ireland
really
comes
to the
fore
when
dealing
with the
implications
that
such
historical
political
concerns
has for the
nation’s
writers
.
Tribal
bonds
remain
strong
and
dictate
reactions
to
writings
and
opinions
; the
reader
, the
audience
, are
already
endowed
with a
unique
sense
of
preconceived
ideas
,
notions
,
assumptions
.
Thus
, for the
writer
,
things
such
as
place
names
and their
references
and
spellings
take
on a
specific
meaning
and
can
either
enhance
or
interfere
with
intended
thematic
concerns
.
Furthermore
,
when
turning
to
specific
events
or
historical
moments
, the
writer
leaves
himself
open
to
criticism
–
why
that
event
?
Why
not the
parallel
event
of
hundreds
of
years
earlier
?
Why
isn’t
history
being
given
equal
discussion
and
attention
as
current
day
? What
political
message
is
being
espoused
? In
such
a
place
was
Seamus
Heaney
attempting
to
write
. In
Heaney's
early
collections
of
poetry
and
prose
, there
existed
a
need
for the
writer
to
identify
his
position
as a
writer
growing
up
in the
political
turmoil
of
Northern
Ireland
. He had to
face
the
influence
of
both
literary
and
cultural
history
and
choose
whether
to
uphold
the
ideals
that had
become
central
to
Northern
Ireland
writing
community
, or to
branch
off
and
insist
on a
new
approach
.
Heaney’s
ultimate
decision
was the
latter
, and he
set
forth
to
challenge
the
Irish
romanticism
championed
by
such
literary
greats
as
W.B
.
Yeats
and
J.M
.
Synge
.
Heaney’s
life
as a
writer
became
a
journey
to
overcome
influences
and
expectations
.
Like
his
father
and
grandfather
before
him,
Heaney
would
set
forth
to
dig
and
toil
in
Northern
Ireland
; not in the
soil
of the
land
, as they
did
, but in
wealth
of
literary
and
cultural
history
,
using
his
pen
as his
tool
as he
sought
for his
own
place
in the
Irish
canon
. This
search
is
divided
into
three
chapters
,
each
chapter
outlining
a
particular
aspect
of that
journey
.
First
,
I
will
identify
the
literary
heritage
to
which
Heaney
was
born
and
demonstrate
how
Heaney
found
that
heritage
to be
overly
idealistic
and,
thus
,
misleading
.
Next
,
I
will
show
the
guidance
that
Heaney
discovered
in the
poems
of the
Irish
poet
,
Patrick
Kavanagh
, and how
Kavanagh’s
more
realistic
approach
helped
Heaney
to
identify
his
own
style
.
Finally
,
I
will
explore
an
in-depth
reading
of
Heaney's
poetry
and
prose
collections
to
clarify
Heaney’s
own
literary
voice
and the
place
he
chose
for
himself
in the
canon
. This
thesis
will
prove
that
Heaney
uses
his
writing
as a
personal
exploration
to
identify
his
position
in the
social
,
political
, and
literary
history
of his
home
country
. The
inevitable
resolution
of this
exploration
is
that
Heaney’s
work
is
both
independent
and
interdependent
; on his
path
to
establishing
his
literary
voice
,
Heaney
had to
first
embrace
and then
transcend
his
contextual
influences
. This
paper's
focus
is
on the
idea
that
Heaney
, in
order
to
find
his
own
voice
in
writing
,
disregarded
the
tradition
founded
by
Yeats
and
Synge
.
Heaney
realized
that he
did
not
want
to
follow
their
lead
of
mythology
and
contemplation
which
Yeats
had
sought
,
nor
did
he
want
to
depict
the
Irish
as
people
with
heightened
and
bawdy
sensibilities
as
shown
in
some
of
Synge's
plays
.
Heaney's
writing
chose
a
different
direction
to what they had
chosen
.
Instead
, his
writing
favors
the
more
realistic
style
and
attainable
existence
with an
emphasis
on the
natural
that
Kavanagh
had
espoused
.
I
first
read
Heaney
back
in the
Eighties
in a
Christian
Brother's
School
in
Newry
,
Northern
Ireland
.
I
remember
the
teacher
explaining
in
detail
Heaney's
decision
in the
poem
,
“Digging,”
not to
follow
his
fathers
and
grandfather's
agricultural
footsteps
and to
instead
pursue
a
career
in
writing
. This
poignant
last
line
from his
most
widely
read
poem
was not
only
an
affirmation
of a
change
in the
Heaney
family
traditio,n
but
it
also
signaled
a
change
of
direction
in
Ireland's
literary
history
.
Ireland's
writing
culture
was
changing
, also.
Heaney
,
born
in
County
Derry
in
1939
,
began
writing
seriously
in the
1960's
, at the
same
time
that
demonstrations
were
taking
place
in
Northern
Ireland
,
during
which
the
Catholics
demanded
civil
rights
and
equal
opportunities
,
similar
to the
Civil
Rights
campaigns
that
took
place
in this
country
. He
wanted
his
poetry
to
reflect
the
struggles
taking
place
in the
Six
Counties
but was
wary
of
being
labeled
a
spokesperson
of the
Nationalist
community
of
which
he was a
member
, or as a
poet
of what was
termed
the
Troubles
. In a
sense
, he was
faced
with
much
the
same
issues
as
Yeats
and
Synge
had
before
him.
Heaney
attempted
to
write
on the
history
of his
home
and not
always
on the
political
history
. He
became
aware
of the
history
of
Irish
writing
which
had
come
before
him. He
looked
into
Ireland's
literary
heritage
and
saw
that
it
was
heavily
influenced
by
two
giants
of
Ireland's
writing
community
:
Yeats
,
perhaps
the
most
famous
and
widely
read
of
all
Irish
writers
, and
Synge
, a
playwright
of
some
renown
.
Both
Yeats
and
Synge
had
advocated
Irish
nationalism
through
themes
of
“inspiration.”
They
believed
that
Ireland
should
one
day
return
to its
former
state
of
supposed
glory
, to a
time
that
never
really
existed
, but
nonetheless
appeared
desirable
.
Yeats
'
poetry
relied
heavily
on
imagery
and
mythology
. His
writing
relied
heavily
on the
romantic
. He
favored
the
life
of
isolation
and
meditation
. He
wrote
a
play
,
Cathleen
Ni
Houlihan
,
whose
theme
advocated
the
shedding
of
blood
for the
cause
of
Ireland
,
much
to the
anguish
of
mothers
and
brothers
and
wives-to-be
. In
Cathleen
Ni
Houlihan
, the
old
woman
travels
around
gathering
young
men
for
Ireland's
cause
promises
glory
and
legacy
.
Yeats
'
writing
had
inspired
young
men
and
women
to
abandon
everything
and
stand
up
against
British
rule
in
Ireland
.
Although
Ireland
eventually
gained
independence
for
most
of the
country
, the
fighters
were
often
ill-equipped
both
militarily
and
politically
and
maintained
a
short
sighted
solution
. In
Synge's
most
popular
play
, The
Playboy
of the
Western
World
, the
characters
were
viewed
as
being
stereotypical
of
Irish
people
and of
relying
too
much
on
style
, as
opposed
to
representing
the
Irish
as they
really
were. They were
often
boisterous
,
violent
and
full
of
sentimentality
. The
characters
often
seemed
laden
with
charm
and
wit
.
Conversations
were
entertaining
and
highly
stylized
,
like
"
Stage
Irish
" as they were
often
labeled
. In
Synge's
play
,
Christy
Mahon
has
recently
murdered
his
father
and
is
attempting
to
explain
himself
to a
young
lady
whom
he
feels
is
being
unkind
. "
That's
an
unkindly
thing
to be
saying
to a
poor
orphaned
traveler
, has a
prison
behind
him, and
hanging
before
, and
Hell's
gap
gaping
below”
(Synge
38)
. He
continues
with the
admission
of the
murder
. "
I
just
riz
the
loy
and
let
fall
the
edge
of
it
on the
ridge
of his
skull
, and he
went
down
at
my
feet
like
an
empty
sack
, and
never
let
a
grunt
or
groan
from him at
all”
(Synge
39)
. The
character
later
tries
compliments
to
evoke
sympathy
and
understanding
from the
young
woman
.
Both
these
writers
failed
to
offer
Heaney
the
direction
he
realized
he
needed
to
find
and
grow
his
literary
voice
.
Heaney
,
realizing
the
opportunity
that
writing
had
afforded
him,
endeavored
to
“unearth”
a
more
pragmatic
approach
, an
approach
not
concerned
with
idealism
and
seeking
glamour
. He
wanted
his
writing
to
celebrate
his
homeland
not
enlarge
it
to
something
that
it
wasn't
. He
remained
constant
with the
fact
that
although
Ireland
was
fragmented
and at
times
war
torn;,it
was
essential
that his
writing
and his
voice
reflected
a
true
understanding
and an
historical
significance
. He
wanted
credibility
. He also
wrote
about
violence
, but from an
understanding
of its
impact
on
generations
and its
legacy
. He
abhorred
violence
but
saw
it
as
ritual
and as a
passage
.
S
topping
short
of
admitting
its
necessity
,
Heaney
acknowledges
that
violence
needs
to be
understood
and
debated
by
both
sides
of the
political
divide
.
Heaney's
personal
search
is
an
interesting
one
. This
paper
will
show
the
journey
his
writing
took
and the
voice
he
found
along
the
way
,
rejecting
the
history
of
Yeats
and
Synge
before
him,
relying
on the
bravery
of
Kavanagh
and
finding
his
own
true
voice
and
identity
in
becoming
a
great
writer
.
Subject
Heaney, Seamus,1939- -- Criticism and interpretation
Department
Department of English
Advisor
Hartwig, Heidi
Type
Text
Digital Format
application/pdf
Language
eng
OCLC number
804653139
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