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Archipelago

A Reader

Nicholas Allen (Hrsg.), Fiona Stafford (Hrsg.)

EPUB
13,19
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Belletristik / Lyrik

Beschreibung

Archipelago was one of the most vital literary magazines of the early decades of the century. It ran to twelve numbers from 2007 to 2019, edited by scholar-poet Andrew McNeillie with the assistance later of James Macdonald Lockhart. Begun as an attempt to reimagine the relationships between the islands of Ireland and Britain, it brought together divergent voices in creative conversations that have transformed the study of islands, coasts and wilderness. The work journeys here and there from the Shetlands to Cornwall, and from the Aran Islands to the coast of Yorkshire, exploring the cultures of diverse zones through some of the best in contemporary writing about landscape, place and people. It lends a telling perspective to our world now fast being defined by climate and environmental degradation.A gathering of poetry, prose and visual artcentred upon the Irish and British archipelago,these varied contributions beckon the readertowards a 'Raised Beach' of words and imagesagainst the attrition of digitised modernitythrough this constellation of writers and artists.

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Schlagwörter

Angus Macmillan, David Lea, Rose Ferraby, Archipelago, Deirdre Ni Chonghaile, Mary Wellesley, Roger Hutchinson, Andrew McNeillie, Philip Lancaster, Roger Deakin, Katherine Rundell, Mick Imlah, poetry, Angela Leighton, etching, border, journal, Jim Poster, Terry Eagleton, John Eifion Jones, Richard Sharland, prose, Ireland, Joh. Elder, Seamus Heaney, England, Ivor Gurney, John Purser, Barbara Greg, Sinead Morrisey, Tim Robinson, Alan Riach, Moya Cannon, David Douglas, Geoffrey Hill, Kathleen Jamie, James Macdonald Lockhart, Tim Dee, Alice Oswald, Scotland, coast, ecology, Gail McNeillie, Derek Mahon, Norman Ackroyd, nature writing, Alexander Moffat, Angharad Price, Mark Cocker, Douglas Dunn, Jos Smith, islands, Gwyneth Lewis, Sinead Morrissey, Peter Davidson, Wales, Northern Ireland, Great Britain, illustrations, Richard Murphy, woodcut, sea, John Kerrigan, Alexandra Harris, Britain, John Brannigan, Michael Longley, Les Murray, Sally Huband, Bernard O'Donoghue, Robert Macfarlane