Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

14
Irish Cultural References in the Early Poetry of Seamus Heaney
  • date post

    20-Oct-2014
  • Category

    Business

  • view

    557
  • download

    0

description

 

Transcript of Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

Page 1: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

Irish Cultural References in the Early Poetry of Seamus Heaney

Page 2: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

‘Turf’ (Peat)

Turf is a combustible fuel•Peat, or turf, is an accumulation of partially decayed vegetation matter 

•Peat forms in wetland bogs, moors, and  swamp forests.

•Peat is harvested as an important source of fuel 

Page 3: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

The ‘good’ (best burning) turf is found deep down in the bog.

Heaney uses the metaphor about digging ‘Down for the good turf’ to show how he needs to dig deep into himself to produce his best poetry.

Page 4: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

‘Turf’ (Peat) Spade

“Shaft against the inside knee”

“Coarse boot nestled on the lug”

The ‘L’ shape of the spade helped to make sure the sods of ‘turf’ were ‘squared’

Page 5: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

Flax

Flax was a very important crop for the Irish economy.

It was used to manufacture everything from writing paper, to rope, and was predominantly use in the ‘Linen’ industry, for which Ireland was once world famous.

Page 6: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

Irish linen tea set

Irish linen suit

Page 7: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

The ‘Flax Dam’

Not a ‘dam’ in the real sense, but a large pool of water where the flax plant stems were placed in order to rot the tough exterior, so that the fibrous insides could be easily separated out.

“All year the flax-dam festered in the heart

Of the townland”

Page 8: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

FlaxDried flax plant Interior fibres Raw material ready

to be used for linen

Page 9: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

An Irish country school

A typical Irish farm of the period

Page 10: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

Traditional Irish bread was cooked on a ‘griddle’ over an open peat fire

This traditional bread is know as ‘soda bread’ and is a still widely eaten in Ireland today.

This type of peat fire, similar to this, would have been present in the kitchen of Seamus Heaney’s home on the farm.

Page 11: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

The Plough

A combination of factors make horse-ploughing a skilled job.

The ploughman must ensure that the ‘furrows’ the plough makes are straight, manipulate the plough, and control the horses – it is to ensure that all the possible farming land is used economically.

Page 12: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

“His shoulders globed like a full sail strungBetween two shafts and the furrow”

“I stumbled in his hob-nailed wake,Fell sometimes on the polished sod”

Page 13: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

potatoes

During the 19th century, almost a 1/3 of the population depended solely on potatoes for their daily nutrition. When the potato crops began to fail between 1845 and 1851, around 1 in eight of a population of 8 million died of starvation, permanently changing the demographic, political and cultural landscape of the nation.

Page 14: Cultural referencesseamus heaneypoetry

“To scatter new potatoes that we pickedLoving their cool hardness in our hands.”

Potatoes are still a mainstay of the Irish diet, but they will always be a reminder of what is know as the ‘Great Hunger’