Seamus Heaney’s Regions

Awards:   Short-listed for Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Award: History (United States). Winner of Robert Penn Warren-Cleanth Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism 2014 (United States)
Author:   Richard Rankin Russell
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
ISBN:  

9780268206826


Pages:   512
Publication Date:   30 September 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Seamus Heaney’s Regions


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Awards

  • Short-listed for Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Award: History (United States).
  • Winner of Robert Penn Warren-Cleanth Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism 2014 (United States)

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Richard Rankin Russell
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
Imprint:   University of Notre Dame Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
ISBN:  

9780268206826


ISBN 10:   0268206821
Pages:   512
Publication Date:   30 September 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

Richard Rankin Russell's Seamus Heaney's Regions is a major and original contribution; it is hard to think of another critical work on Heaney that is so complete in its coverage, from the earliest activities to Human Chain. Russell is extremely well-versed in Heaney's writings and extends his analysis beyond the usual concentration on the poetry to bring in the crucial prose and dramatic works, including the early, largely forgotten items. The breadth of his approach makes his book of interest to scholars in such neighboring fields as social geography, history, and theology as well as contemporary literature. -Bernard O'Donoghue, Wadham College, University of Oxford In this study of Heaney's Northern Irish regionalism, Baylor University English professor Russell (Poetry and Peace) neatly traces the impact of the author's Ulster roots across his poetry, politics, culture, and spirituality. Russell delves into the political and cultural implications of a divided Ireland, noting that Heaney was an optimist-always imagining a new region of Northern Ireland, healed and undivided. . . . A substantial and magisterial work of literary criticism, Russell's volume stands as a valuable companion to Heaney's writing. -Publishers Weekly Richard Rankin Russell's new study, Seamus Heaney's Regions, is the first which is able to take account of the full run of Heaney's oeuvre. While it was completed before August 2013, it is also, of course, the first study to appear since Heaney's death last summer. . . . Russell's work is deeply sensitive to the ethical dimension of Heaney's writing, and he is concerned to emphasise and laud the beneficent conscience of the poet as it is manifest in his work throughout a writing career of nearly 50 years. . . . Another merit of the book, for first-time students of Heaney and longstanding readers and critics alike, is that Russell is scrupulous in dealing with and responding to a staggering number of the critical opinions which have emerged from that industrial load of scholarship. -The Oxonian Review Those of you in search of a book that will tell you what Seamus Heaney [was] all about need look no further. Bringing together studies over the past fifteen years, Russell embeds the poet who attained rock-star notoriety and the Nobel prize in the context of the conquered and economically suppressed Catholic population of Northern Ireland and Ulster in particular, who managed to 'cross over', attain a first-rate education at Queen's University, Belfast, and with it an expertise in drama, poetry, and cultural studies that allowed him to socialize smoothly with the cream of the established and 'entitled' Anglo-Irish settler class. . . . Russell demonstrates that the most powerful wing in British poetry since the Romantics Byron, Wordsworth, Keats, etc. has been regionalism. . . . Russell discusses thoroughly Heaney's engagement with each of his significant predecessors and contemporaries and gives extended commentaries on each of his works, retrieving early radio dramas, uncollected poems, and first drafts of important works. -Heythrop Journal Richard Rankin Russell's Seamus Heaney's Regions is, by any standard, a major contribution to the field. Reading it, one becomes aware of how much Heaney commentary has matured over the last couple of decades. Russell's study is liminal only in the sense that it presumes that the reader is familiar with the scholarship that has gone before; in itself, it represents the beginning of what is yet to come. -New Hibernia Review This book is a sustained, well-drawn and nuanced argument that takes the region as an alembic through which to look awry at Heaney's work. This book is structured like a Prezi presentation, as there is a chronology at work, but what Russell does is to offer an overview and then zoom in on a specific area to illustrate his point . . . a significant addition to the Heaney critical canon. -Irish Studies Review . . . Russell's new book provides an extensive study of regionalism in Heaney's poetry and prose. Russell provides a broad view of current perceptions of Heaney's work and a history of regionalism in Northern Ireland . . . . Especially valuable for the close reading of Heaney's oeuvre in support of the focus on sense of place, the book is a valuable resource for Irish studies. -Choice . . . Seamus Heaney's Regions is a welcome and vital contribution to what is now a very populated field, a field that can and should be called Heaney Studies. While at this stage no single critical volume can be transformative of how Heaney's work is read and considered for years to come, in its exploration of the poet's regionalism Russell's astute, readable, and insightful book provides an important, clarifying vantage from which to view Seamus Heaney's remarkable achievement. -Irish Literary Supplement This is a scholarly and accessible exploration of regionalism in the writing of Seamus Heaney from one of the most insightful readers of his work . . . . Russell's book is full of such information and is a significant and original addition to the critical work on Seamus Heaney. -SHARP News The book is impressive for its knowledge not just of Heaney's work, but [also] of the awesome amount of scholarship that Heaney's work has generated. By focusing on the regional, Russell achieves a task similar to that of its subject 'the writer,' wrote Heaney, 'must re-envisage the region as the original point.' -The Year's Work in English Studies


"""Richard Rankin Russell's Seamus Heaney's Regions is a major and original contribution; it is hard to think of another critical work on Heaney that is so complete in its coverage, from the earliest activities to Human Chain. Russell is extremely well-versed in Heaney's writings and extends his analysis beyond the usual concentration on the poetry to bring in the crucial prose and dramatic works, including the early, largely forgotten items. The breadth of his approach makes his book of interest to scholars in such neighboring fields as social geography, history, and theology as well as contemporary literature."" —Bernard O'Donoghue, Wadham College, University of Oxford ""In this study of Heaney's Northern Irish regionalism, Baylor University English professor Russell (Poetry and Peace) neatly traces the impact of the author's Ulster roots across his poetry, politics, culture, and spirituality. Russell delves into the political and cultural implications of a divided Ireland, noting that Heaney was an optimist—always imagining ""a new region of Northern Ireland,"" healed and undivided. . . . A substantial and magisterial work of literary criticism, Russell's volume stands as a valuable companion to Heaney's writing."" —Publishers Weekly ""Richard Rankin Russell’s new study, Seamus Heaney’s Regions, is the first which is able to take account of the full run of Heaney’s oeuvre. While it was completed before August 2013, it is also, of course, the first study to appear since Heaney’s death last summer. . . . Russell’s work is deeply sensitive to the ethical dimension of Heaney’s writing, and he is concerned to emphasise and laud the beneficent conscience of the poet as it is manifest in his work throughout a writing career of nearly 50 years. . . . Another merit of the book, for first-time students of Heaney and longstanding readers and critics alike, is that Russell is scrupulous in dealing with and responding to a staggering number of the critical opinions which have emerged from that industrial load of scholarship."" —The Oxonian Review “Those of you in search of a book that will tell you what Seamus Heaney [was] all about need look no further. Bringing together studies over the past fifteen years, Russell embeds the poet who attained rock-star notoriety and the Nobel prize in the context of the conquered and economically suppressed Catholic population of Northern Ireland and Ulster in particular, who managed to ‘cross over’, attain a first-rate education at Queen’s University, Belfast, and with it an expertise in drama, poetry, and cultural studies that allowed him to socialize smoothly with the cream of the established and ‘entitled’ Anglo-Irish settler class. . . . Russell demonstrates that the most powerful wing in British poetry since the Romantics Byron, Wordsworth, Keats, etc. has been regionalism. . . . Russell discusses thoroughly Heaney’s engagement with each of his significant predecessors and contemporaries and gives extended commentaries on each of his works, retrieving early radio dramas, uncollected poems, and first drafts of important works.” —Heythrop Journal ""Richard Rankin Russell’s Seamus Heaney’s Regions is, by any standard, a major contribution to the field. Reading it, one becomes aware of how much Heaney commentary has matured over the last couple of decades. Russell’s study is liminal only in the sense that it presumes that the reader is familiar with the scholarship that has gone before; in itself, it represents the beginning of what is yet to come."" —New Hibernia Review ""This book is a sustained, well-drawn and nuanced argument that takes the region as an alembic through which to look awry at Heaney's work. This book is structured like a Prezi presentation, as there is a chronology at work, but what Russell does is to offer an overview and then zoom in on a specific area to illustrate his point . . . a significant addition to the Heaney critical canon."" —Irish Studies Review “. . . Russell’s new book provides an extensive study of regionalism in Heaney’s poetry and prose. Russell provides a broad view of current perceptions of Heaney’s work and a history of regionalism in Northern Ireland . . . . Especially valuable for the close reading of Heaney’s oeuvre in support of the focus on sense of place, the book is a valuable resource for Irish studies.” —Choice “. . . Seamus Heaney’s Regions is a welcome and vital contribution to what is now a very populated field, a field that can and should be called Heaney Studies. While at this stage no single critical volume can be transformative of how Heaney’s work is read and considered for years to come, in its exploration of the poet’s regionalism Russell’s astute, readable, and insightful book provides an important, clarifying vantage from which to view Seamus Heaney’s remarkable achievement.” —Irish Literary Supplement ""This is a scholarly and accessible exploration of regionalism in the writing of Seamus Heaney from one of the most insightful readers of his work . . . . Russell’s book is full of such information and is a significant and original addition to the critical work on Seamus Heaney.” —SHARP News “The book is impressive for its knowledge not just of Heaney’s work, but [also] of the awesome amount of scholarship that Heaney’s work has generated. By focusing on the regional, Russell achieves a task similar to that of its subject ‘the writer,’ wrote Heaney, ‘must re-envisage the region as the original point.’” —The Year’s Work in English Studies"


Author Information

Richard Rankin Russell is professor of English and director of graduate studies in English at Baylor University.

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