Irish Neutrality: Louis MacNeice’s Poetic Politics at the Outset of “The Emergency”

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37389/abei.v11i0.3656

Palabras clave:

Ireland, Second World War, Louis MacNeice’.

Resumen

This article builds upon previous scholarship attuned to Ireland’s
complex position as a neutral state during the Second World War (“The
Emergency”), and which points out Louis MacNeice’s hostility towards the Irish government’s official stance. It does so by looking at “The Closing Album” as a political lyric critiquing Irish neutrality’s isolation0
ist and damaging effects and shows how the poem – in the act of critiquing neutrality – asserts the modern poet’s position as an emotionally invested political spokesman. I argue that the nation’s political goals were irreconcilable with postcolonial artistic aims: Irish writers were intent on constructing an image of Irishness that was not dictated by British coloring and was exportable through the medium of their art, while the government aimed at becoming a self-sufficient,
sovereign nation. This split between politician and artist during The Emergency ushers in a modern Irish poetry that is at once political and aesthetic. 

Biografía del autor/a

  • Matthew Schultz, Universidad de San Luis, Saint Louis University, Saint Louis University

    SCHULTZ, Matthew teaches, researches, and coordinates the Graduate Writing Center at Saint Louis University. His recent publications include pieces on W.B. Yeats, James
    Joyce, and Oscar Wilde. This article is an expanded and updated version of a conference paper given at the 2008 American Conference for Irish Sudies in Davenport, Iowa.

Referencias

Brown, Richard Danson. “Neutrality and Commitment: MacNeice, Yeats, Ireland and the Second World War.” Journal of Modern Literature. Spring 2005.

Brown, Terrence. Ireland: A Social and Cultural History 1922-2002. London: Harper Perennial, 2004. 175.

Dwan, David. “That Ancient Sect: Yeats, Hegel, and the Possibility of Epic in Ireland.” Irish Studies Review. 12.2 (2004).

De Valera, Eamon. Ireland’s Stand: Being a Selection of the Speeches of Eamon De Valera During the War (1939-1945). Second Edition. Dublin: M.H. Gill and Son, LTD., 1946.

Foster, R.F. Modern Ireland: 1600-1972. London: Penguin, 1988.

Gwynn, Stephen. “Ireland and the War.” Foreign Affairs. January 1940.

Howard, Ben. “In the Shadow of the Gasworks: Louis MacNeice and the Critical Office.” Sewanee Review. Winter 1991.

Jesse, Neal G. “Choosing to Go It Alone: Irish Neutrality in Theoretical and Comparative Perspective.” International Political Science Review. 27.1 (2006).

Joyce, James. Ulysses. New York: Vintage International, 1990.

Keating, Patrick. A Singular Stance: Irish Neutrality in the 1980s. Dublin: Institute of Public Administration, 1984.

Lane, Jack and Clifford, Brendan (eds.). Elizabeth Bowen: “Notes on Eire,” Espionage Reports to Winston Churchill, 1940-1942: With a Review of Irish Neutrality in World War II. Co. Cork: Aubane historical Society, 1999.

MacNeice, Louis. Modern Poetry: A Personal Essay. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1938.

____. Collected Poems 1925-1948. London: Faber and Faber, 1949.

McDonald, Peter. “Louis MacNeice: Irony and Responsibility.” The Cambridge Companion to Contemporary Irish Poetry, ed. Matthew Campbell. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Raymond, Raymond James. “Irish Neutrality: Ideology or Pragmatism?” International Affairs. Winter 1983-84.

R.M. Smyllie, “Unneutral Neutral Eire.” Foreign Affairs. 24.2 (1946).

Sean O’Faoláin, “The Price of Peace,” Bell, vol. X, no. 4. July 1945.

Wills, Clair. “The Aesthetics of Irish Neutrality During the Second World War.” Boundary. Spring, 2004.

Descargas

Publicado

2009-06-17

Número

Sección

Poetry

Cómo citar

Schultz, M. (2009). Irish Neutrality: Louis MacNeice’s Poetic Politics at the Outset of “The Emergency”. ABEI Journal, 11, 165-179. https://doi.org/10.37389/abei.v11i0.3656