Description

Book Synopsis
Woven Shades of Green is an annotated selection of literature by authors who focus on the natural world and the beauty of Ireland. It begins with the Irish monks and their largely anonymous nature poetry, written at a time when Ireland was heavily forested. A section follows devoted to the changing Irish landscape, through both deforestation and famine, including the nature poetry of William Allingham, and James Clarence Mangan, essays from Thomas Gainford and William Thackerary, and novel excerpts from William Carleton and Emily Lawless. The anthology then turns to the nature literature of the Irish Literary Revival, including Yeats and Synge, and an excerpt from George Moore’s novel The Lake. Part four shifts to modern Irish nature poetry, beginning with Patrick Kavanaugh, and continuing with the poetry of Seamus Heaney, Eavan Boland, and others. Finally, the anthology concludes with a section on various Irish naturalist writers, and the unique prose and philosophical nature writing of John Moriarty, followed by a comprehensive list of environmental organizations in Ireland, which seek to preserve the natural beauty of this unique country.

Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.

Trade Review
"Irish literature’s ubiquitous relationship to the environment offers a vast reservoir of meditations on humanity’s relationship with non-human natures. This can often prove daunting to both established scholars and novice readers. For all those who are interested in the intersectional concerns that arise from Irish literature’s evocations of the environment, Tim Wenzell’s timely anthology will prove to be especially invaluable. The book brings into sharp focus the unique ways in which Irish history merges with national and geopolitical ecologies, and how geographical questions are always conflated with geological ones.” -- Dr. Malcolm Sen, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
"Time has shaped a distinctive history of Irish nature literature in a deeply gathered, insightful anthology....Itself a generous treasury of Irish nature poetry and prose, the book is ordered by historical responses to religion, romanticism, colonisation, catastrophe, nationalism and material success." * Irish Times *
"Wenzell's annotated selection is timely, looking as it does at a genre that doesn't seem to have bitten in Ireland quite as hard as it has in other publishing territories, a symptom perhaps of a more complicated - and at times harrowing - relationship with the natural world." * Sunday Independent *
"This anthology emphasizes the importance of the natural world of Ireland and the breadth of writing that has embraced it during many centuries." * Gale Literature Book Review Index *
"Readers familiar with Irish literature and ecocriticism will find this volume filled with familiar faces and materials, as well as a few more obscure and exciting ones. This anthology offers scholars a series of substantial pieces from which to expand and further consider Irish nature writing and Irish approaches to the natural world." * Irish Studies Review *
"The Best of the University Presses: 100 Books to Escape the News As Recommended by the UP Community"
https://lithub.com/the-best-of-the-university-presses-a-reading-list/ * LitHub *
"Woven Shades of Green...shows the great variety and depth of editor Tim Wenzell’s knowledge and insight on the topic across history. He possesses a keen sense for choosing not only the key authors and texts, but also often underappreciated writers or lesser known works by famous ones." * James Joyce Literary Supplement *
"A generous and inclusive anthology, focusing mainly on poetry but open also to significant pieces of prose....The engagement by these writers shows a valuable addition to the literature of the natural world." * New Hibernia Review *
"Irish literature’s ubiquitous relationship to the environment offers a vast reservoir of meditations on humanity’s relationship with non-human natures. This can often prove daunting to both established scholars and novice readers. For all those who are interested in the intersectional concerns that arise from Irish literature’s evocations of the environment, Tim Wenzell’s timely anthology will prove to be especially invaluable. The book brings into sharp focus the unique ways in which Irish history merges with national and geopolitical ecologies, and how geographical questions are always conflated with geological ones.” -- Dr. Malcolm Sen, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
"Time has shaped a distinctive history of Irish nature literature in a deeply gathered, insightful anthology....Itself a generous treasury of Irish nature poetry and prose, the book is ordered by historical responses to religion, romanticism, colonisation, catastrophe, nationalism and material success." * Irish Times *
"Wenzell's annotated selection is timely, looking as it does at a genre that doesn't seem to have bitten in Ireland quite as hard as it has in other publishing territories, a symptom perhaps of a more complicated - and at times harrowing - relationship with the natural world." * Sunday Independent *
"This anthology emphasizes the importance of the natural world of Ireland and the breadth of writing that has embraced it during many centuries." * Gale Literature Book Review Index *
"Readers familiar with Irish literature and ecocriticism will find this volume filled with familiar faces and materials, as well as a few more obscure and exciting ones. This anthology offers scholars a series of substantial pieces from which to expand and further consider Irish nature writing and Irish approaches to the natural world." * Irish Studies Review *
"The Best of the University Presses: 100 Books to Escape the News As Recommended by the UP Community"
https://lithub.com/the-best-of-the-university-presses-a-reading-list/ * LitHub *
"Woven Shades of Green...shows the great variety and depth of editor Tim Wenzell’s knowledge and insight on the topic across history. He possesses a keen sense for choosing not only the key authors and texts, but also often underappreciated writers or lesser known works by famous ones." * James Joyce Literary Supplement *
"A generous and inclusive anthology, focusing mainly on poetry but open also to significant pieces of prose....The engagement by these writers shows a valuable addition to the literature of the natural world." * New Hibernia Review *

Table of Contents

Foreword by John Wilson Foster
Preface

Part I Early Irish Nature Poetry
Introduction
The Mystery
Deer’s Cry
St. Columcille of Iona
Columcille Fecit
Caelius Sedulius
Invocation
Anonymous Early Irish Nature Poetry
The Blackbird by Belfast Lough
The Scribe
The White Lake
The Lark
The Hermit’s Song
King and Hermit
Song of the Sea
Summer Has Come
Song of Summer
Summer is Gone
A Song of Winter
Arran
Buile Suibhne
Part II Nature Writing and the Changing Irish Landscape
Introduction
Thomas Gainsford
A Description of Ireland
William Allingham
Wishing
The Fairies
The Lover and Birds
Among the Heather
In a Spring Grove
The Ruined Chapel
William Hamilton Drummond
The Giant’s Causeway, Book First
James Clarence Mangan
The Dawning of the Day
The Fair Hills of Eire, O!
The Lovely Land: On a Landscape Painted by Maclise
William Makepeace Thackeray
From Irish Sketchbook
William Carleton
From The Black Prophet
Emily Lawless
From Hurrish: A Study
Part III Nature and the Irish Literary Revival
Introduction
Katharine Tynan
The Children of Lir
High Summer
Indian Summer
Nymphs
St. Francis to the Birds
The Birds’ Bargain
The Garden
The Wind that Shakes the Barley
AE (George Russell)
By the Margin of the Great Deep
Oversoul
The Great Breath
The Voice of the Waters
A New World
A Vision of Beauty
Carrowmore
Creation
The Winds of Angus
The Nuts of Knowledge
Children of Lir
Connla’s Well
From The Candle of Vision
William Butler Yeats
Coole Park, 1929
Coole Park and Ballylee, 1931
Who Goes with Fergus?
Down by the Salley Gardens
In the Seven Woods
The Shadowy Waters (Introductory Lines)
The Cat and the Moon
The Fairy Pedant
The Lake Isle of Innisfree
The Madness of King Goll
The Song of Wandering Aengus ...
The Stolen Child ...
The Two Trees ...
The White Birds ...
The Wild Swans at Coole ...
Eva Gore-Booth
The Dreamer ...
Re-Incarnation ...
Secret Waters ...
The Little Waves of Breffny
The Weaver
John Millington Synge
In Kerry
To the Oaks of Glencree
Prelude
In Glencullen
On an Island
From The Aran Islands
Riders to the Sea
George Moore
Preface and Chapter 1 from The Lake
Padraic Colum
A Drover
A Cradle Song
Across the Door
The Crane ...
Dublin Roads ..
River Mates ...
Part IV Modern Irish Nature Poetry
Introduction ...
Patrick Kavanaugh ..
Poplars
Lilacs in the City
October
Canal Bank Walk
Having to Live in the Country
Inniskeen Road: July Evening
On an Apple-Ripe September Morning
Primrose
Wet Evening in April
Louis MacNeice
The Sunlight on the Garden ..
Wolves ...
Tree Party
Seamus Heaney ..
Death of a Naturalist
The Salmon Fisher to the Fisherman
Limbo
St. Kevin and the Blackbird .
Eavan Boland
The Lost Land
The River
Mountain Time
This Moment
Ode to Suburbia
Escape ...
A Sparrow Hawk in the Suburbs
Moya Cannon
Bees under Snow
Eavesdropping
Two Ivory Swans
Winter View from Binn Briocain
Primavera
The Tube-Case Makers
Crannog
Hazelnuts
John Montague
All Legendary Obstacles
The Wild Dog Rose
The Trout
Michael Longley
The Osprey
Badger
Hedgehog
Kingfisher
Robin
Out of the Sea
Her Mime of the Lame Seagull
Carrigskeewaun
Saint Francis to the Birds
Derek Mahon
The Seasons
Achill
Aphrodite’s Pool
The Mayo Tao
Penhurst Place
The Woods
The Dream Play
“A Hermit”
Leaves
Sean Lysaght
Golden Eagle
The Clare Island Survey
Goldcrest
From Bird Sweeney
Desmond Egan
The Great Blasket
Sunday Evening
Meadowsweet
Snow Snow Snow Snow
A Pigeon Dead
Envoi
Mary O’Malley
Absent
The Man of Aran
Porpoises
The Price of Silk is Paid in Gold
The Storm
Liaden with a Mortgage Briefly Tastes the Stars
Rosemarie Rowley
Osborn O h - Aimbirgin; A Cry from the Heart of a Poet—Morning in Beara
The Blackbird of Derry of the Cairn
In Praise of the Hill Between of Howth
Blind Seamus McCourt: Welcome to the Bird’
Kitty Dwyer
Part V The Literature of Irish Naturalists
Introduction
John Tyndall
Belfast Address
Robert Lloyd Praeger
From The Way That I Went
Michael Viney
From A Year’s Turning
From The Irish Times, “Another Life”
Tim Robinson
From Connemara: Listening to the Wind, “Preface”
From Connemara: Listening to the Wind, “The Boneyard”
John Moriarty
From Invoking Ireland

Appendix: Environmental Organizations in Ireland
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Index


Woven Shades of Green: An Anthology of Irish

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    A Paperback / softback by Tim Wenzell

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      View other formats and editions of Woven Shades of Green: An Anthology of Irish by Tim Wenzell

      Publisher: Bucknell University Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 09/08/2019
      ISBN13: 9781684481378, 978-1684481378
      ISBN10: 1684481376

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Woven Shades of Green is an annotated selection of literature by authors who focus on the natural world and the beauty of Ireland. It begins with the Irish monks and their largely anonymous nature poetry, written at a time when Ireland was heavily forested. A section follows devoted to the changing Irish landscape, through both deforestation and famine, including the nature poetry of William Allingham, and James Clarence Mangan, essays from Thomas Gainford and William Thackerary, and novel excerpts from William Carleton and Emily Lawless. The anthology then turns to the nature literature of the Irish Literary Revival, including Yeats and Synge, and an excerpt from George Moore’s novel The Lake. Part four shifts to modern Irish nature poetry, beginning with Patrick Kavanaugh, and continuing with the poetry of Seamus Heaney, Eavan Boland, and others. Finally, the anthology concludes with a section on various Irish naturalist writers, and the unique prose and philosophical nature writing of John Moriarty, followed by a comprehensive list of environmental organizations in Ireland, which seek to preserve the natural beauty of this unique country.

      Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.

      Trade Review
      "Irish literature’s ubiquitous relationship to the environment offers a vast reservoir of meditations on humanity’s relationship with non-human natures. This can often prove daunting to both established scholars and novice readers. For all those who are interested in the intersectional concerns that arise from Irish literature’s evocations of the environment, Tim Wenzell’s timely anthology will prove to be especially invaluable. The book brings into sharp focus the unique ways in which Irish history merges with national and geopolitical ecologies, and how geographical questions are always conflated with geological ones.” -- Dr. Malcolm Sen, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
      "Time has shaped a distinctive history of Irish nature literature in a deeply gathered, insightful anthology....Itself a generous treasury of Irish nature poetry and prose, the book is ordered by historical responses to religion, romanticism, colonisation, catastrophe, nationalism and material success." * Irish Times *
      "Wenzell's annotated selection is timely, looking as it does at a genre that doesn't seem to have bitten in Ireland quite as hard as it has in other publishing territories, a symptom perhaps of a more complicated - and at times harrowing - relationship with the natural world." * Sunday Independent *
      "This anthology emphasizes the importance of the natural world of Ireland and the breadth of writing that has embraced it during many centuries." * Gale Literature Book Review Index *
      "Readers familiar with Irish literature and ecocriticism will find this volume filled with familiar faces and materials, as well as a few more obscure and exciting ones. This anthology offers scholars a series of substantial pieces from which to expand and further consider Irish nature writing and Irish approaches to the natural world." * Irish Studies Review *
      "The Best of the University Presses: 100 Books to Escape the News As Recommended by the UP Community"
      https://lithub.com/the-best-of-the-university-presses-a-reading-list/ * LitHub *
      "Woven Shades of Green...shows the great variety and depth of editor Tim Wenzell’s knowledge and insight on the topic across history. He possesses a keen sense for choosing not only the key authors and texts, but also often underappreciated writers or lesser known works by famous ones." * James Joyce Literary Supplement *
      "A generous and inclusive anthology, focusing mainly on poetry but open also to significant pieces of prose....The engagement by these writers shows a valuable addition to the literature of the natural world." * New Hibernia Review *
      "Irish literature’s ubiquitous relationship to the environment offers a vast reservoir of meditations on humanity’s relationship with non-human natures. This can often prove daunting to both established scholars and novice readers. For all those who are interested in the intersectional concerns that arise from Irish literature’s evocations of the environment, Tim Wenzell’s timely anthology will prove to be especially invaluable. The book brings into sharp focus the unique ways in which Irish history merges with national and geopolitical ecologies, and how geographical questions are always conflated with geological ones.” -- Dr. Malcolm Sen, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
      "Time has shaped a distinctive history of Irish nature literature in a deeply gathered, insightful anthology....Itself a generous treasury of Irish nature poetry and prose, the book is ordered by historical responses to religion, romanticism, colonisation, catastrophe, nationalism and material success." * Irish Times *
      "Wenzell's annotated selection is timely, looking as it does at a genre that doesn't seem to have bitten in Ireland quite as hard as it has in other publishing territories, a symptom perhaps of a more complicated - and at times harrowing - relationship with the natural world." * Sunday Independent *
      "This anthology emphasizes the importance of the natural world of Ireland and the breadth of writing that has embraced it during many centuries." * Gale Literature Book Review Index *
      "Readers familiar with Irish literature and ecocriticism will find this volume filled with familiar faces and materials, as well as a few more obscure and exciting ones. This anthology offers scholars a series of substantial pieces from which to expand and further consider Irish nature writing and Irish approaches to the natural world." * Irish Studies Review *
      "The Best of the University Presses: 100 Books to Escape the News As Recommended by the UP Community"
      https://lithub.com/the-best-of-the-university-presses-a-reading-list/ * LitHub *
      "Woven Shades of Green...shows the great variety and depth of editor Tim Wenzell’s knowledge and insight on the topic across history. He possesses a keen sense for choosing not only the key authors and texts, but also often underappreciated writers or lesser known works by famous ones." * James Joyce Literary Supplement *
      "A generous and inclusive anthology, focusing mainly on poetry but open also to significant pieces of prose....The engagement by these writers shows a valuable addition to the literature of the natural world." * New Hibernia Review *

      Table of Contents

      Foreword by John Wilson Foster
      Preface

      Part I Early Irish Nature Poetry
      Introduction
      The Mystery
      Deer’s Cry
      St. Columcille of Iona
      Columcille Fecit
      Caelius Sedulius
      Invocation
      Anonymous Early Irish Nature Poetry
      The Blackbird by Belfast Lough
      The Scribe
      The White Lake
      The Lark
      The Hermit’s Song
      King and Hermit
      Song of the Sea
      Summer Has Come
      Song of Summer
      Summer is Gone
      A Song of Winter
      Arran
      Buile Suibhne
      Part II Nature Writing and the Changing Irish Landscape
      Introduction
      Thomas Gainsford
      A Description of Ireland
      William Allingham
      Wishing
      The Fairies
      The Lover and Birds
      Among the Heather
      In a Spring Grove
      The Ruined Chapel
      William Hamilton Drummond
      The Giant’s Causeway, Book First
      James Clarence Mangan
      The Dawning of the Day
      The Fair Hills of Eire, O!
      The Lovely Land: On a Landscape Painted by Maclise
      William Makepeace Thackeray
      From Irish Sketchbook
      William Carleton
      From The Black Prophet
      Emily Lawless
      From Hurrish: A Study
      Part III Nature and the Irish Literary Revival
      Introduction
      Katharine Tynan
      The Children of Lir
      High Summer
      Indian Summer
      Nymphs
      St. Francis to the Birds
      The Birds’ Bargain
      The Garden
      The Wind that Shakes the Barley
      AE (George Russell)
      By the Margin of the Great Deep
      Oversoul
      The Great Breath
      The Voice of the Waters
      A New World
      A Vision of Beauty
      Carrowmore
      Creation
      The Winds of Angus
      The Nuts of Knowledge
      Children of Lir
      Connla’s Well
      From The Candle of Vision
      William Butler Yeats
      Coole Park, 1929
      Coole Park and Ballylee, 1931
      Who Goes with Fergus?
      Down by the Salley Gardens
      In the Seven Woods
      The Shadowy Waters (Introductory Lines)
      The Cat and the Moon
      The Fairy Pedant
      The Lake Isle of Innisfree
      The Madness of King Goll
      The Song of Wandering Aengus ...
      The Stolen Child ...
      The Two Trees ...
      The White Birds ...
      The Wild Swans at Coole ...
      Eva Gore-Booth
      The Dreamer ...
      Re-Incarnation ...
      Secret Waters ...
      The Little Waves of Breffny
      The Weaver
      John Millington Synge
      In Kerry
      To the Oaks of Glencree
      Prelude
      In Glencullen
      On an Island
      From The Aran Islands
      Riders to the Sea
      George Moore
      Preface and Chapter 1 from The Lake
      Padraic Colum
      A Drover
      A Cradle Song
      Across the Door
      The Crane ...
      Dublin Roads ..
      River Mates ...
      Part IV Modern Irish Nature Poetry
      Introduction ...
      Patrick Kavanaugh ..
      Poplars
      Lilacs in the City
      October
      Canal Bank Walk
      Having to Live in the Country
      Inniskeen Road: July Evening
      On an Apple-Ripe September Morning
      Primrose
      Wet Evening in April
      Louis MacNeice
      The Sunlight on the Garden ..
      Wolves ...
      Tree Party
      Seamus Heaney ..
      Death of a Naturalist
      The Salmon Fisher to the Fisherman
      Limbo
      St. Kevin and the Blackbird .
      Eavan Boland
      The Lost Land
      The River
      Mountain Time
      This Moment
      Ode to Suburbia
      Escape ...
      A Sparrow Hawk in the Suburbs
      Moya Cannon
      Bees under Snow
      Eavesdropping
      Two Ivory Swans
      Winter View from Binn Briocain
      Primavera
      The Tube-Case Makers
      Crannog
      Hazelnuts
      John Montague
      All Legendary Obstacles
      The Wild Dog Rose
      The Trout
      Michael Longley
      The Osprey
      Badger
      Hedgehog
      Kingfisher
      Robin
      Out of the Sea
      Her Mime of the Lame Seagull
      Carrigskeewaun
      Saint Francis to the Birds
      Derek Mahon
      The Seasons
      Achill
      Aphrodite’s Pool
      The Mayo Tao
      Penhurst Place
      The Woods
      The Dream Play
      “A Hermit”
      Leaves
      Sean Lysaght
      Golden Eagle
      The Clare Island Survey
      Goldcrest
      From Bird Sweeney
      Desmond Egan
      The Great Blasket
      Sunday Evening
      Meadowsweet
      Snow Snow Snow Snow
      A Pigeon Dead
      Envoi
      Mary O’Malley
      Absent
      The Man of Aran
      Porpoises
      The Price of Silk is Paid in Gold
      The Storm
      Liaden with a Mortgage Briefly Tastes the Stars
      Rosemarie Rowley
      Osborn O h - Aimbirgin; A Cry from the Heart of a Poet—Morning in Beara
      The Blackbird of Derry of the Cairn
      In Praise of the Hill Between of Howth
      Blind Seamus McCourt: Welcome to the Bird’
      Kitty Dwyer
      Part V The Literature of Irish Naturalists
      Introduction
      John Tyndall
      Belfast Address
      Robert Lloyd Praeger
      From The Way That I Went
      Michael Viney
      From A Year’s Turning
      From The Irish Times, “Another Life”
      Tim Robinson
      From Connemara: Listening to the Wind, “Preface”
      From Connemara: Listening to the Wind, “The Boneyard”
      John Moriarty
      From Invoking Ireland

      Appendix: Environmental Organizations in Ireland
      Acknowledgments
      Bibliography
      Index


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