Famine Memory and Contemporary Irish Poetry Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Contemporary Irish poetry is producing a tradition of memorial to the Famine years of the 1840s. Countering purist versions of Irish identity as Catholic, indigenous, and rural, this body of work is provoked by Famine memory to explore Irishness as diasporic and widely transnational. This article thus reflects on the political and social responsibilities implied by such poetrys inscription of history as exemplary cultural memory, with particular attention to transnational connection and environmental justice. Famine memory is inscribed iconographically as postmemory (to adapt Marianne Hirschs term), by which cultural memory constrained in a traumatic return to the past in present identity and within the islands boundaries can open to its transnational diaspora, expanding from a rehearsal of historical grievance to an exploration of contemporary responsibility.

published proceedings

  • TWENTIETH CENTURY LITERATURE

author list (cited authors)

  • Eide, M.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Eide, Marian

publication date

  • March 2017