Exploring five decades of engagement with Irish literature, Gerald Dawe shares insights from his experiences in academic settings and literary discussions. The book delves into the evolution of literary criticism and highlights the significance of political discourse in understanding Irish literary works. Through his reflections, Dawe offers a rich perspective on the interplay between literature and politics in Ireland, making it a valuable resource for scholars and enthusiasts alike.
Gerald Dawe Ordine dei libri






- 2023
- 2023
Balancing Acts gathers together interviews and conversations between Gerald Dawe and a wide cast of interlocutors between 1995 and 2020. Drawn from exchanges on television and radio, print and online media, these conversations with fellow poets, critics, journalists, colleagues and friends, are a testament to Dawe' s generous, open-hearted and open-minded approachability as a poet for whom the ' artful way of making' poetry has always been informed by an attitude of just ' getting on with it' . In the same way that memory, for him, is ' not just about the past' but involves ' a route into the present' , these fascinating interviews and conversations provide an insight into the poet on the go, in the process of making unforgettable poetry happen.
- 2022
Exploring the contrasts between the northern and southern hemispheres, this work delves into the lives of characters shaped by their environments and cultural backgrounds. The narrative weaves together themes of identity, belonging, and the impact of nature on personal growth. Through vivid storytelling, it highlights the emotional landscapes of its protagonists, inviting readers to reflect on their own journeys and connections to place. Rich in imagery and insight, the book offers a profound exploration of the human experience across diverse settings.
- 2022
Gerald Dawe delves into the concept of home as portrayed by notable Irish writers such as W. B. Yeats, Sean O'Casey, Derek Mahon, and Gail McConnell. Through a series of engaging readings, he unpacks the diverse interpretations and emotional resonance of home within their works, highlighting the cultural and personal significance it holds in Irish literature. This exploration offers insights into the complexities of identity and belonging in the context of Ireland's literary landscape.
- 2021
A City Imagined
- 130pagine
- 5 ore di lettura
A City Imagined is a paean to the city of Belfast and its writers. Written in his highly regarded wry and lyrical style, Dawe’s memoir sketches the outlines of his life as he starts to understand the city in which he was born, before embracing some of the local writers whose early work had such an influential part in nudging him in the direction of writing— poets, in the main, whose first books were read with the enthusiasm of a young man beguiled by the language and music of poetry. Building on the critical acclaim of In Another Van Morrison & Belfast and Looking Through You, this third and final volume of the Northern Chronicles trilogy completes a fascinating and rich portrait of the celebrated poet’s tangled and ever-evolving relationship with his native city.
- 2020
The Sound of the Shuttle is an eloquent and compelling selection of essays written over four decades by Belfast-born poet Gerald Dawe, exploring the difficult and at times neglected territory of cultural belonging and northern Protestantism. The title, taken from a letter of John Keats during a journey through the north-east in 1818, evokes the lives, now erased from history, of the thousands of workers in the linen industry, tobacco factories and shipyards of Belfast. Sketching in literary, social and political contexts to widen the frame of reference, Dawe offers fascinating insights into the current debate about a ‘New Ireland’ by bringing into critical focus the experiences, beliefs and achievements of a sometimes maligned and often misread community, generally referred to as Northern protestants. In making the telling point that ‘The jagged edges of the violent past are still locked within ideological vices’, The Sound of the Shuttle is an insightful and honest report based upon many years of creative and critical practice. This is an essential book for our changing times.
- 2020
Looking Through You
- 130pagine
- 5 ore di lettura
Looking Through Northern Chronicles, the sequel to renowned Belfast poet and author Gerald Dawe’s critically acclaimed In Another Van Morrison and Belfast, is the evocative record of the musical, literary and artistic influences that inspired and forged Dawe’s awakening as a poet, and his career in Irish literature. Taking its bearings from Belfast in the 1960s, The Beatles’ Rubber Soul album and the energising shock of reading the great American poets Robert Lowell and Sylvia Plath, Dawe’s wry and engaging style has produced a telling record of the music, poetry and culture of growing up in the northern capital. Featuring the stunning photography of Euan Gëbler, this literary memoir is a must-have for fans of Dawe’s work, a superb introduction to his world for new readers, and, in his own words, may help ‘renew Belfast and the ordinary life and lives of the city, and allow its people to overcome as best they can the seemingly irreconcilable and unsolvable conflicts of the past’.
- 2018
This engagingly personal chronicle by poet Gerald Dawe explores the lives and times of leading Irish writers, including W.B. Yeats, Samuel Beckett, Elizabeth Bowen, Patrick Kavanagh, James Plunkett, John McGahern, Stewart Parker and Leontia Flynn, alongside lesser-known names from the earlier decades of the twentieth century, such as Ethna Carberry, Alice Milligan, Joseph Campbell and George Reavey. The Wrong Country also portrays the changing cultural backgrounds of the author's contemporaries, such as Thomas Kilroy, Derek Mahon, Eavan Boland, Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Colm Tóibín, Hugo Hamilton, Sinead Morrissey and Michelle O'Sullivan.Gerald Dawe presents an accessible and jargon-free view of modern Irish literature, filtered perceptively through his own, warmly personal, lens, and raises important questions about cultural belonging, the commercialisation of contemporary writing, and the influence of Irish literary culture in a digital age, to reposition our understanding of Irish writing in a wider context for today's readers.
- 2017
"In Another World" is a unique trip through the music scene of 1950s and 60s Belfast, mapped 'into the mystic' through the timeless lyrics of Van 'the Man' Morrison. The aptly soulful and poetic prose are written with the electric wit of acclaimed poet, fellow Belfast man, and former Orangefield classmate of Van's, Gerald Dawe. Blown away by Morrison's unique and explosive brand of raw R'nB energy infused with lyrics evoking the Belfast of his youth, Dawe has written this extraordinary book as a compass for the inspirations that underlie Morrison's spine-tingling blend of music. Silhouetted in the work is Belfast, moody and vibrant, and the formative influence of the pre-Troubles northern capital on Morrison's musical direction. Dawe's writing transmutes the tender and unforgettable strains of Morrison's work, from the release in 1968 of Astral Weeks to the publication in 2014 of Lit Up Inside: Selected Lyrics. Conceived as a powerful tribute to Van Morrison's extraordinary accomplishments, "In Another World" taps into his legacy's soul, and is kin to its enchantments. A timeless and memorable gift for any Van Morrison fan. [Subject: Music Studies, Music History, Irish Studies, History, Van Morrison]
- 2017
The Cambridge Companion to Irish Poets
- 470pagine
- 17 ore di lettura
Introduction Gerald Dawe; 1. Prolegomena - 'Spenser's island' Sean Lysaght; 2. Jonathan Swift 1667-1745 James Ward; 3. Aogan O'Raithille c.1670-1729 Aodan MacPoilin; 4. Oliver Goldsmith 1728-1774 Michael Griffin; 5. Thomas Moore 1779-1852 Jeffrey Vail; 6. James Clarence Mangan 1803-1849 John McAuliffe; 7. W. B. Yeats 1865-1939 Nicholas Grene; 8. Francis Ledwidge 1887-1917 Fran Brearton; 9. Thomas MacGreevy 1893-1967 David Wheatley; 10. Austin Clarke 1896-1974 Lucy Collins; 11. Patrick Kavanagh 1904-1967 Tom Walker; 12. Samuel Beckett 1906-1989 Gerald Dawe; 13. Louis Mac Neice 1907-1963 Chris Morash; 14. John Hewitt 1907-1987 Guy Woodward; 15. Séan Ó Ríordáin 1916-1977 Louis de Paor; 16. Richard Murphy 1927 Benjamin Keatinge; 17. Thomas Kinsella 1928 Andrew Fitzsimons; 18. John Montague 1929 Maurice Riordan; 19. Brendan Kennelly 1936 Richard Pine; 20. Seamus Heaney 1939-2013 Terence Brown; 21. Michael Longley 1939 Florence Impens; 22. Michael Hartnett 1941-1999 Peter Sirr; 23. Derek Mahon 1941 Matt Campbell; 24. Eilean Ni Chuilleanain 1942 Hugh Haughton; 25. Eavan Boland 1944 Justin Quinn; 26. Paul Durcan 1944 Alan Gillis; 27. Ciaran Carson 1948 Nicholas Allen; 28. Medbh McGuckian 1950 Maria Johnston; 29. Paul Muldoon 1951 Peter McDonald; 30. Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill 1952 John Dillon.