Boland, Eavan - Debrah Raschke (essay date June 1996)
Debrah Raschke (essay date June 1996)
SOURCE: Raschke, Debrah. “Eavan Boland's Outside History and In a Time of Violence: Rescuing Women, the Concrete, and Other Things Physical from the Dung Heap.” Colby Quarterly 32, no. 2 (June 1996): 135-42.
[In the following essay, Raschke asserts that “Boland's Outside History and In a Time of Violence use the concrete, physical world to revise notions of what sustains, to query historiography, and to expose the dangers of mythology.”]
Eavan Boland's poetry has been described as “impeccably scornful,” as “denunciatory,” as too “strident” and too “vehement” (Henigan 110), and as justification for “her dangerous attachment to bringing up babies” (Reizbaum 472). She has been accused of unduly elevating the domestic, of mythologizing the suburbs, and of betraying an Irish literary tradition, which, in emphasizing Gaelic roots, relies heavily on...
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- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Patricia L. Hagen and Thomas W. Zelman (essay date winter 1991)
- Anne Stevenson (essay date January-February 1992)
- Ann Owens Weekes (essay date 1994)
- Debrah Raschke (essay date June 1996)
- Rose Atfield (essay date spring 1997)
- Nell Sullivan (essay date December 1997)
- David C. Ward (review date January-February 1999)
- Kate Daniels (essay date spring 1999)
- Albert Gelpi (essay date December 1999)
- Michael Thurston (essay date December 1999)
- Catriona Clutterbuck (essay date December 1999)
- Jacqueline Belanger (essay date September 2000)
- Paul Keen (essay date September 2000)
- Katie Conboy (essay date 2000)
- Anne Shifrer (essay date December 2001)
- Richard Rankin Russell (essay date winter 2002)
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