Boland, Eavan - Rose Atfield (essay date spring 1997)
Rose Atfield (essay date spring 1997)
SOURCE: Atfield, Rose. “Postcolonialism in the Poetry and Essays of Eavan Boland.” Women: A Cultural Review 8, no. 2 (spring 1997): 168-82.
[In the following essay, Atfield considers the issue of postcolonialism in Boland's verse.]
Postcolonialism in the poetry of Eavan Boland is a process of the recognition and exposure of colonialism: its denial and repression of identity, and the restoration and reconstruction of that identity in terms of place, history and literary tradition. Boland established a sense of dual postcolonialism when, in the Ronald Duncan lecture for the Poetry Book Society, she referred to ‘two identities’ which ‘shape and reshape what I have to say’. ‘I am an Irish poet and a woman poet. In the first category I enter the tradition of the English language at an angle. In the second, I enter my own tradition at an even more oblique angle’ (Boland 1994b).
Boland...
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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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