Although Scottish poetry gained an increasingly high profile towards the end of the twentieth century, this groundbreaking work is the first book length study of the field. Christopher Whyte takes significant collections by 20 poets writing in English, Scots and Gaelic as the starting point for an examination of their whole career and of the connections between them. Poets featured include Sorley MacLean, Edwin Muir, George Campbell Hay, Sydney Goodsir Smith, Edwin Morgan, Tom Leonard, W.S. Graham, Iain Crichton Smith, Liz Lochhead, Douglas Dunn, Kathleen Jamie, Carol Ann Duffy and Aonghas MacNeacail. Whyte argues that concerns with nationalism and national identity have so far shaped our reading of Scottish poetry and that the time has come to set these aside in favour of new approaches where Scottishness will no longer be a dominant concern. His sobering yet balanced reappraisal of the failures and achievements of the interwar period offers a sound basis for the discussion of more contemporary work which follows. Modern Scottish Poetry is a refreshing and stimulating reassessment of the cultural scene as the new century gets under way.
Innovative, challenging and frequently controversial, the readings demonstrate a consistent theoretical sophistication and highlight the richness and variety of work produced across six decades. Features * In depth coverage of each of 20 poets: women poets and gay material included providing lively material for discussion and debate * Sums up the critical tradition so far and suggests how it needs to change * Ideas put forward are rooted in close reading of specific poems * Basic bibliographical information (main edition, secondary literature) for each author plus an invitation to further exploration and research
- ISBN10 0748616004
- ISBN13 9780748616008
- Publish Date 1 June 2004
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Edinburgh University Press
- Format Paperback
- Pages 246
- Language English
- URL http://columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/074861/0748616004.HTM