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Incomparable Poetry: An Essay on the Financial Crisis of 2007–2008 and Irish Literature

Robert Kiely

Published on May 14, 2020 by punctum books

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Pages
162 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-950192-83-0 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-950192-84-7 (PDF)
LCCN
LCCN: 2020936447
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: LIT004120, LIT014000
Thema subject codes
THEMA: 1DDR, DSA, KCL, KCX

Incomparable Poetry: An Essay on the Financial Crisis of 2007-2008 and Irish Literature is an attempt to describe the ways in which the financial crisis of 2007-8 impacted literature in Ireland, and thereby describe the ways in which poetry engages with, is structured by, and wrestles with economic issues.

Ireland and its contemporary poetry is a particularly suitable case study for studying the effect of the economic crisis on Anglophone poetry, because poetry in Ireland has a special relationship to the state and economy due to its status as a postcolonial nation-state. Beginning with a summary of recent Irish economic and cultural history, and moving across experimental and mainstream poetry, this essay outlines how the poetry of Trevor Joyce, Leontia Flynn, Dave Lordan, and Rachel Warriner addresses in its form and content the boom years of the Celtic Tiger and the financial crisis.

Incomparable Poetry also discusses the concerns and historical contexts these poets have turned to in order to make sense of these events – including Chinese history, accountancy, sexual violence, and Iceland’s economic history. In contemporary Irish poetry, the author argues, we see a significant interest in matching capitalism’s accounting abilities, but in this attempt, these poems often end up broken by the imposition of an external conceptual framework or economic logic.

Biographies

  • Robert Kiely

    (Author)

    University of Surrey

    Robert Kiely grew up in Cork, Ireland and now lives in London. His critical work has been published in Irish University Review, Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry, The Parish Review, and Samuel Beckett Today/Aujourd'hui. His chapbooks include How to Read (Crater, 2017) and Killing the Cop in Your Head (Sad, 2017). He is Poet-in-Residence at University of Surrey for 2019-20.

Endorsements

Conor McCabe

author of Sins of the Father: Tracing the Decisions that Shaped the Irish Economy

Paris Bride is the third of John Schad’s powerfully original, fascinating, learned, and challenging experiments in life-writing; this time resurrecting the sparse and to some degree contradictory evidence about Marie Schad, his putative early twentieth-century ancestor. “This book,” writes Schad in his “Afterword,” “takes modernism to the courts for its dubious claim to accommodate what Virginia Woolf once called ‘the lives of the obscure.’” I must, however, leave it to the reader to become, as I have been, fascinated by this wonderful book and by responding to the difficult challenge of trying to figure out what is going on in it from sentence to sentence and page to page.

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Genres

  • Capital+Lucre
  • Literary Studies

Keywords

  • capitalism
  • Chinese history
  • financial crisis
  • Ireland
  • Irish literature
  • literary studies
  • poetry