UGC Approved Journal no 63975(19)
New UGC Peer-Reviewed Rules

ISSN: 2349-5162 | ESTD Year : 2014
Volume 12 | Issue 9 | September 2025

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Published in:

Volume 9 Issue 8
August-2022
eISSN: 2349-5162

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Published Paper ID:
JETIR2208241


Registration ID:
501229

Page Number

c377-c381

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Title

"Vivid cast” and “opaque repose": A Note on the Literary and Historical Consciousness in Seamus Heaney’s Bog Poems

Abstract

The early poems of the Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney can be perceived as fundamentally concerned with childhood, horrors of violence and the wonders of nature. They lure the reader into a world full of "the smells/of waterweed, fungus and dank moss". His enchantment with the hidden secrets of the earth reaches another dimension in his celebrated bog poems that look into places where ‘there is no reflection’. These poems particularly deal with the metaphor of Bogland, a repository of power and mystery. The bog land, for Heaney, becomes a space of spiritual, historical and physical enchantment, an inextricable link between life and death, mobility and immobility, past and present. Bog poems are symbolic representation of death and deathlessness, endless violence and peace, the grotesque and the beautiful, the silences and the screams. In the bog bodies, victims of violent tribal sacrifice, Heaney seems to have found the metaphors of historical and literary consciousness of Ireland in particular and the world in general. This connection with the past lets him explore the present in an oblique, exquisite and forceful way. Sometimes the bog bodies become the means to mythologise the torture and violence they went through, sometimes they are the repositories of beauty and atrocity of the world, sometimes they are mere eulogies of Irish national consciousness, and sometimes they are the evocation of an exquisite ecofeminist ethos. This paper tries to explore a few selected bog poems of Heaney- Bogland, Tollund Man, Bog Queen, The Grauballe Man, Punishment, and Strange Fruit, through the light of the Irish history of death, violence, sacrifice, guilt and justice.

Key Words

Bog body, bog poems, consciousness, history, Irish, sacrifice, Seamus Heaney, violence

Cite This Article

""Vivid cast” and “opaque repose": A Note on the Literary and Historical Consciousness in Seamus Heaney’s Bog Poems", International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research (www.jetir.org), ISSN:2349-5162, Vol.9, Issue 8, page no.c377-c381, August-2022, Available :http://www.jetir.org/papers/JETIR2208241.pdf

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2349-5162 | Impact Factor 7.95 Calculate by Google Scholar

An International Scholarly Open Access Journal, Peer-Reviewed, Refereed Journal Impact Factor 7.95 Calculate by Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool, Multidisciplinary, Monthly, Multilanguage Journal Indexing in All Major Database & Metadata, Citation Generator

Cite This Article

""Vivid cast” and “opaque repose": A Note on the Literary and Historical Consciousness in Seamus Heaney’s Bog Poems", International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research (www.jetir.org | UGC and issn Approved), ISSN:2349-5162, Vol.9, Issue 8, page no. ppc377-c381, August-2022, Available at : http://www.jetir.org/papers/JETIR2208241.pdf

Publication Details

Published Paper ID: JETIR2208241
Registration ID: 501229
Published In: Volume 9 | Issue 8 | Year August-2022
DOI (Digital Object Identifier):
Page No: c377-c381
Country: Krishnanagar, West Bengal, India .
Area: Arts
ISSN Number: 2349-5162
Publisher: IJ Publication


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