Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Carson, Ciaran - Mark Ford (review date 19 January 1989)
Carson, Ciaran - Mark Ford (review date 19 January 1989)
Mark Ford (review date 19 January 1989)
SOURCE: Ford, Mark. “Sssnnnwhuffffll.” London Review of Books 11, no. 2 (19 January 1989): 14.
[In the following excerpt, Ford argues that Carson establishes a particular political context in The Irish for No.]
[The Irish for No] is Ciaran Carson's second collection of poems. His first, The New Estate (1976), revealed an intricate, lyrical poet intensely aware of traditional Irish cultures, and concerned to connect them meaningfully with the sprawl of modern living; these early poems are taut, rather literary, and often very beautiful. His themes are pretty much the same in his equally impressive new book, but his approach to them has changed radically. All the poems in The Irish for No are written in long easygoing lines—more or less fourteeners—and exhibit a wonderful fidelity to the casual flow of ordinary speech and storytelling. What could be more enticing and...
[The entire page is 989 words long]
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Criticism
- Clair Wills (review date 4 March 1988)
- John Drexel (essay date winter 1989)
- Mark Ford (review date 19 January 1989)
- John Lucas (review date 3 August 1990)
- Neil Corcoran (essay date 2 November 1990)
- Ben Howard (essay date April 1992)
- Michael Glover (review date 12 February 1994)
- Clair Wills (essay date 25 March 1994)
- Calvin Bedient (essay date October 1994)
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- Patricia Craig (review date 31 May 1996)
- Lawrence Norfolk (essay date 27 September 1996)
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- Charles M. Madigan (review date 16 March 1997)
- David Nicholson (review date 22 July 1997)
- Denis Donoghue (essay date 27 November 1997)
- Terry Eagleton (review date 12 December 1997)
- Henry Hitchings (review date 12 December 1997)
- Christian Wiman (review date February 1998)
- Ben Howard (essay date spring 1998)
- John Kerrigan (essay date April 1998)
- Emily D'Aulaire (essay date October 1998)
- William Pratt (review date autumn 1999)
- Robert MacFarlane (review date 19 November 1999)
- David Carr-Gomm (review date 31 March 2001)
- Gregory Dart (review date 20 April 2001)
- Bernadette Murphy (review date 18 October 2001)
- Michelle Reale (review date fall 2002)
- Sean O'Brien (review date 10 January 2003)
- Further Reading
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