Absence and fasting: the critical and the creative in the author's published works from out of step: pursuing Seamus Heaney to Purgatory (1992) to the Getting of Vellum (2000)

Byron, C, 2002. Absence and fasting: the critical and the creative in the author's published works from out of step: pursuing Seamus Heaney to Purgatory (1992) to the Getting of Vellum (2000). PhD, Nottingham Trent University.

[thumbnail of 10183177.pdf]
Preview
Text
10183177.pdf - Published version

Download (30MB) | Preview

Abstract

In 'Absence and Fasting' the poet Catherine Byron discusses the interactions between the critical and the creative in her work, from the publication of the monograph Out of Step in 1992 to that of the poetry collection The Getting of Vellum in 2000 and the essay 'An Appetite for Fasting?' in 2001.

In Out of Step she embarked on several years of critical and creative engagement with the locus of spiritual and literary pilgrimage, St Patrick's Purgatory on Station Island in Lough Derg. Initially drawn there by curiosity about the implications of the absences and silences of women in Seamus Heaney's sequence 'Station Island', she discovered that her footstepping of Heaney's narrator 'Seamus Heaney' on the island itself led her to unexpected places of doubt and despair, both cultural and personal. In a series of reflective essays (published 1992,1998, 2001) on the repercussions of her engagement with the matter of Ireland, and Station Island in particular, she interrogated the autobiographical in her own writing and that of others. In the 1993 collection The Fat-Hen Field Hospital she fore-grounded poems set outside Ireland, on a Scottish smallholding where the violence is mainly agricultural. These poems led to her collaboration with artist-calligrapher Denis Brown, and to new themes and modes of composition, initially writing on skins - animal and human - and latterly on glass. This culminated in the publication of the collection The Getting of Vellum, in which the ghosts of Station Island make their final appearance.

The account of this period of research concludes with a brief look forward to Byron's next project, which starts from an investigation into the chosen 'invisibility' of the protagonists in the Spanish novels of Kate O'Brien and Maura Laverty, and into their appetite for the physical.

Item Type: Thesis
Description: A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the regulations of The Nottingham Trent University for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy on the basis of public works.
Creators: Byron, C.
Date: 2002
ISBN: 9781369314533
Identifiers:
Number
Type
PQ10183177
Other
Divisions: Schools > School of Arts and Humanities
Record created by: Linda Sullivan
Date Added: 18 Sep 2020 14:54
Last Modified: 27 Jul 2023 10:47
URI: https://irep.ntu.ac.uk/id/eprint/40828

Actions (login required)

Edit View Edit View

Statistics

Views

Views per month over past year

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year