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EILÉAN NÍ CHUILLEANÁIN<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

BIBLIOGRAPHY AND CRITICISM<br />

Acts and Monuments. Dublin: The Gallery Press, 1972.<br />

Site of Ambush. Dublin: The Gallery Press, 1975.<br />

The Second Voyage. Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press; Dublin: The Gallery<br />

Press, 1977. 2nd edition, Dublin: The Gallery Press, 1986; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 1989.<br />

Cork. Dublin: The Gallery Press, 1977.<br />

The Rose-Geranium. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1981.<br />

The Magdalene Sermon. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1989.<br />

The Magdalene Sermon and Other Poems. Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press,<br />

1991.<br />

The Brazen Serpent. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1994; Winston-Salem, N.C.:<br />

<strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 1995.<br />

The Girl Who Married the Reindeer. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2001; Winston-<br />

Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Selected Poems. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2008; London: Faber, 2009; Winston-<br />

Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2009.<br />

The Sun-fish. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2009; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2010.<br />

Other Works<br />

“Woman as Writer: The Social Matrix.” Crane Bag 4.1 (1980): 101–5.<br />

“Introduction.”In Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, ed. Irish Women: Image and Achievement. Dublin:<br />

Arlen House, 1985. 1–11.<br />

“Women As Writers: Dánta Grá to Maria Edgeworth.” In Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, ed. Irish<br />

Women: Image and Achievement. Dublin: Arlen House, 1985. 111–26.


“Acts and Monuments of an Unelected Nation: The Cailleach Writes about the Renaissance.”<br />

The Southern Review 31.3 (July 1995): 570–80.<br />

The Water-Horse: Poems in Irish by Nuala Ní Dhomnaill. Translated by Medbh McGuckian and<br />

Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1999; Winston-Salem, NC:<br />

<strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2004.<br />

Ranchetti, Michele. Verbale. Translated by Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and others. Dublin: Instituto<br />

Italiano di Cultura, 2005.<br />

Malancioiu, Ileana. After the Raising of Lazarus. Translated by Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin. Cork:<br />

Southword Editions, 2005.<br />

Interviews<br />

Consalvo, Deborah McWilliams. “An Interview with Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Irish Literary<br />

Supplement 12.1 (1993): 15–17.<br />

Ray, Kevin. “Interview with Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Eire-Ireland 32.1–2 (1996): 62–73.<br />

Criticism on Ní Chuilleanáin<br />

Allen, Nicholas. “‘Each Page Lies Open to the Version of Every Other’: History in the Poetry of<br />

Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 22–36.<br />

Batten, Guinn. “‘The World Not Dead after All’: Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin’s Work of Revival.”<br />

Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 1–22.<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Clutterbuck, Catriona. “Good Faith in Religion and Art: The Later Poetry of Eiléan Ní<br />

Chuilleanáin.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 131–156.<br />

Coughlan, Patricia. “‘No Lasting Fruit at All’: Containing, Recognition, and Relinquishing in<br />

The Girl Who Married the Reindeer.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1<br />

(2007): 157–177.<br />

Conboy, Sheila C. “‘What You Have Seen is Beyond Speech.’ Female Journeys in the Poetry of<br />

Eavan Boland and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Canadian Journal of Irish Studies 16 (1990): 65–72.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.


Faragó, Borbála. “‘Alcove in the Wind’: Silence and Space in Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin’s Poetry.”<br />

Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 68–83.<br />

Fogarty, Anne. “Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies<br />

37.1 (2007): 1–250.<br />

Foster, John Wilson. “‘The Second Voyage’ by Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Eire-Ireland 13.4<br />

(1978): 147–51.<br />

Gilsenan Nordin, Irene. “‘Between the Dark Shore and the Light’: The Exilic Subject in Eiléan<br />

Ní Chuilleanáin’s The Second Voyage.” In Michael Böss, Irene Gilsenan Nordin and Britta<br />

Olinder, eds. Exile: Realities and Metaphors in Irish History and Literature. Århus: Dolphin<br />

Press, 2005. 178–94.<br />

___. “‘Betwixt and Between’: The Body as Liminal Threshold in the Poetry of Eiléan Ní<br />

Chuilleanáin.” In Irene Gilsenan Nordin, ed. The Body and Desire in Contemporary Irish Poetry.<br />

Dublin and Portland, OR: Irish Academic Press, 2006. 226–43.<br />

___. “Like a Shadow in Water’: Phenomenology and Poetics in the Work of Eiléan Ní<br />

Chuilleanáin.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 98–114.<br />

Grennan, Eamon. “Real Things.” Poetry Ireland Review 46 (Summer 1995): 44–52.<br />

Haberstroh, Patricia Boyle. “Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Women Creating Women. Syracuse:<br />

Syracuse <strong>University</strong> Press, 1996. 93–120.<br />

___. “The Architectural Metaphor in the Poetry of Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Irish <strong>University</strong><br />

Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 84–97.<br />

Holdridge, Jefferson. “‘A Snake Pouring over the Ground’: Nature and the Sacred in Eiléan Ní<br />

Chuilleanáin.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 115–30.<br />

Johnston, Dillon. “‘Hundred-Pocketed Time’: Ní Chuilleanáin’s Baroque Spaces.” Irish<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 53–67.<br />

___. “‘Our Bodies’ Eyes and Writing Hands’: Secrecy and Sensuality in Ní Chuilleanáin’s<br />

Baroque Art.” In Anthony Bradley and Maryann Gialanella Valiulis, eds. Gender and Sexuality<br />

in Modern Ireland. Amherst: <strong>University</strong> of Massachusetts Press, 1997. 187–211.<br />

Kerrigan, John. “Hidden Ireland: Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and Munster Poetry.” Critical Quarterly<br />

40.4 (Winter 1998): 76–100.<br />

McCarthy, Thomas. “‘We Could Be in Any City’: Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and Cork.” Irish<br />

<strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 230–43.<br />

Meaney, Geraldine. “History Gasps: Myth in Contemporary Irish Women’s Poetry.” In Michael


Kenneally, ed. Poetry in Contemporary Irish Literature. Gerrard’s Cross: Colin Smythe, 1995.<br />

99–113.<br />

O'Malley, Aidan. “Praeterito: (Non-)Possession and the Translational Impulse in Ní<br />

Chuilleanáin’s Work.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.1 (2007): 178–96.<br />

Sarbin, Deborah. “‘Out of Myth into History’: The Poetry of Eavan Boland and Eiléan Ní<br />

Chuilleanáin.” Canadian Journal of Irish Studies 19.1 (July 1993): 86–96.<br />

Sirr, Peter. “‘How Things Begin to Happen’: Notes on Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and Medbh<br />

McGuckian.” The Southern Review 31.3 (Summer 1995): 450–67.<br />

EAVAN BOLAND<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

New Territory. Dublin: Allen, Figgis & Co., 1967.<br />

The War Horse. Dublin: Arlen House; London: Victor Gollancz, 1975.<br />

In Her Own Image. Dublin: Arlen House, 1980.<br />

Introducing Eavan Boland: Poems. Princeton: The Ontario Review Press, 1981.<br />

Night Feed. Dublin: Arlen House; London and Boston: Marion Boyars, 1982; Manchester:<br />

Carcanet Press, 1994.<br />

The Journey and Other Poems. Dublin: Arlen House, 1986; Manchester: Carcanet, 1987.<br />

Selected Poems. Manchester: Carcanet Press; Dublin: Arlen House, 1989.<br />

Outside History. Manchester: Carcanet Press, 1990.<br />

Outside History: Selected Poems 1980–1990. New York: Norton, 1990.<br />

In a Time of Violence. Manchester: Carcanet; New York: Norton, 1994.<br />

An Origin Like Water: Collected Poems 1967–1987. New York and London: Norton, 1997.<br />

The Lost Land. New York and London: Norton, 1998.<br />

Against Love Poetry. New York: Norton, 2001.<br />

Code. Manchester: Carcanet Press, 2001.


New Collected Poems. Manchester: Carcanet Press, 2005.<br />

Domestic Violence. Manchester: Carcanet Press, 2007; New York: Norton, 2007.<br />

Other Works<br />

“The Woman Poet: Her Dilemma.” Midland Review 3 (1986): 40–47. Also in Krino (Spring,<br />

1986); Stand Magazine (Winter 1986–87): 43–49; and American Poetry Review 16.1 (Jan./Feb.<br />

1987): 17–20.<br />

“An Un-Romantic American.” Parnassus: Poetry in Review 14.2 (1988): 73–92.<br />

“The Woman Poet in a National Tradition.” Studies 76: 148–158. Also published as “A Kind of<br />

Scar: The Woman Poet in a National Tradition.” Dublin: Attic LIP Pamphlet, 1989.<br />

“Outside History.” American Poetry Review 19.2 (March/April 1990): 32–38.<br />

“The Woman, The Place, The Poet.” Georgia Review 44.1–2 (1990): 97–109.<br />

“In Defense of Workshops.” Poetry Ireland Review 31 (1991): 40–48.<br />

“Writing in the Margin.” Irish Times 18 April 1992: 12.<br />

“Writing the Political Poem in Ireland.” The Southern Review (July 1995): 485–98.<br />

Object Lessons: The Life of the Woman and the Poet in Our Time. New York and London:<br />

Norton, 1995.<br />

“New Wave 2: Born in the ’50’s; Irish Poets of the Global Village.” In Theo Dorgan, ed. Irish<br />

Poets since Kavanagh. Blackrock, Co. Dublin: Four Courts Press, 1996.<br />

“Daughters of Colony.” Eire-Ireland, 32.2–3 (1997): 7–20.<br />

The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms. Eavan Boland and Mark Strand,<br />

eds. New York: Norton, 2000.<br />

Three Irish Poets: An Anthology: Eavan Boland, Paula Meehan, Mary O’Malley. Eavan Boland,<br />

ed. Manchester: Carcanet Press, 2003.<br />

After Every War: Twentieth-Century Women Poets. Translated by Eavan Boland. Princeton, NJ:<br />

Princeton UP, 2004.<br />

Irish Writers on Writing. Eavan Boland, ed. San Antonio, TX: Trinity <strong>University</strong> Press, 2007.


The Making of a Sonnet: A Norton Anthology. Eavan Boland and Edward Hirsch, eds. New<br />

York: Norton, 2008.<br />

Interviews<br />

Consalvo, Deborah McWilliams. “An Interview with Eavan Boland.” Studies: An Irish Quarterly<br />

Review 181.321 (Spring 1992): 89–100.<br />

O’Connell, Patty. “Eavan Boland: An Interview.” Poets & Writers (November–December 1994):<br />

32–45.<br />

Reizbaum, Marilyn. “An Interview with Eavan Boland.” Contemporary Literature 30.4 (1989):<br />

470–90.<br />

Tall, Deborah. “Q&A with Eavan Boland.” Irish Literary Supplement 7.2 (1988): 39–40.<br />

Wright, Nancy Means and Dennis Hannan. “Q&A with Eavan Boland.” Irish Literary<br />

Supplement (Spring 1991): 10–11.<br />

Criticism on Boland<br />

Allen Randolph, Jody, ed. Eavan Boland: A Critical Companion. New York: W.W. Norton &<br />

Co., 2008.<br />

___. “Eavan Boland.” In Bill McCormack, ed. Blackwell Companion to Modern Irish Culture.<br />

Oxford: Blackwell, 2001.<br />

___. “Écriture Feminine and the Authorship of Self in Eavan Boland’s In Her Own Image.”<br />

Colby Quarterly 27.1 (March 1991): 48–59.<br />

___. “Finding a Voice where She Found a Vision.” PN Review 2.1 (September–October 1994):<br />

13–17.<br />

___. “Private Worlds, Public Realities: Eavan Boland’s Poetry, 1967–1990.” Irish <strong>University</strong><br />

Review 23.1 (1993): 5–22.<br />

___ and Anthony Roche. “Eavan Boland—Special Issue.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review 23.1 (1993).<br />

Atfield, Rose. “Postcolonialism in the Poetry and Essays of Eavan Boland.” A Cultural Review<br />

8.2 (Spring 1997): 168–82.<br />

Auge, Andrew J. “Fracture and Wound: Eavan Boland’s Poetry of Nationality.” New Hibernia<br />

Review 8.2 (2004): 121–41.


Balinisteanu, Tudor. “The Persephone Figure in Eavan Boland’s ‘The Pomegranate’ and Liz<br />

Lochhead’s ‘Lucy’s Diary.’” In V.G. Julie Rajan and Sanja Bahun-Radunović, eds. From Word<br />

to Canvas: Appropriations of Myth in Women’s Aesthetic Production. New Castle upon Tyne:<br />

Cambridge Scholars, 2009. 23–49.<br />

Batten, Guinn. “‘Time Feels Unclocked’: Romantic History, Gender, and a Poetics of Hysteria<br />

in Recent Irish Poetry.” Bucknell Review 45.2 (2002): 29–50.<br />

Belanguer, Jacquelin. “‘The Laws of Metaphor’: Reading Eavan Boland’s Anorexic in an Irish<br />

Context.” Colby Quarterly 36.3 (2000): 242–51.<br />

Böss, Michael. “The Naming of Loss and Love: Eavan Boland’s Lost Land.” Nordic Irish<br />

Studies 3.1 (2004): 127–35.<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Brown, Susan. “A Victorian Sappho: Agency, Identity and the Politics of Poetics.” ESC 20.2<br />

(June 1994): 205–25.<br />

Burns, Christy L. “Beautiful Labors: Lyricism and Feminist Revisions in Eavan Boland’s<br />

Poetry.” Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature 20.2 (2001): 217–36.<br />

Cannon, M. Louise. “The Extraordinary Within the Ordinary: The Poetry of Eavan Boland and<br />

Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” South Atlantic Review 60.2: 31–46.<br />

Clutterbuck, Catriona. “Eavan Boland and the Politics of Authority in Irish Poetry.” Yearbook of<br />

English Studies 35 (2005): 72–90.<br />

___. “Irish Critical Responses to Self-Representation in Eavan Boland, 1987–1995.” Colby<br />

Quarterly 35.4 (1999): 275–87.<br />

Conboy, Sheila C. “Eavan Boland’s Topography of Displacement.” Eire-Ireland 29.3 (1994):<br />

137–46.<br />

___. “‘What You Have Seen is Beyond Speech.’ Female Journeys in the Poetry of Eavan Boland<br />

and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin.” Canadian Journal of Irish Studies 16 (1990): 65–72.<br />

Consalvo, Deborah. “In Common Usage: Eavan Boland’s Poetic Voice.” Eire-Ireland 28<br />

(Summer 1993): 100–15.<br />

Craps, Stef. “‘Only Not Beyond Love’: Testimony, Subalternity, and the Famine in the Poetry of<br />

Eavan Boland.” Neophilologus 94.1 (2010): 165–76.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.


Denman, Peter. “Ways of Saying: Boland, Carson, McGuckian.” In Michael Kenneally, ed.<br />

Poetry in Contemporary Irish Literature. Gerrard’s Cross: Colin Smythe, 1995. 158–73.<br />

Haberstroh, Patricia Boyle. “Eavan Boland.” Women Creating Women. Syracuse: Syracuse<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 1996. 59–90.<br />

___. “Woman, Artist and Image in Night Feed.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review 23.1 (1993): 67–94.<br />

Hagen, Patricia L. and Thomas W. Zelman. “‘We Were Never on the Scene of the Crime’: Eavan<br />

Boland’s Repossession of History.” Twentieth Century Literature 37.4 (Winter 1991): 442–52.<br />

Hardy, Molly O’Hagan. “Symbolic Power: Mary Robinson’s Presidency and Eavan Boland’s<br />

Poetry.” New Hibernia Review 12.3 (2008): 47–65.<br />

Heuving, Jeanne. “Poetry in Our Political Lives.” Contemporary Literature 37.2 (1996): 315–32.<br />

Kelly, Sylvia. “The Silent Cage and Female Creativity in In Her Own Image.” Irish <strong>University</strong><br />

Review 23.1 (1993): 45–56.<br />

Kilcoyne, Catherine. “Eavan Boland and Strategic Memory.” Nordic Irish Studies 6 (2007): 89–<br />

102.<br />

Lojo-Rodríguez, Laura M. “At the Heart of Maternal Darkness’: Infanticidal Wish in the Poetry<br />

of Mary O’Donnell and Eavan Boland.” Nordic Irish Studies 7 (2008): 103–16.<br />

Luftig, Victor. “‘Something Will Happen to You Who Read’: Adrienne Rich, Eavan Boland.”<br />

Irish <strong>University</strong> Review 23.1 (1993): 57–66.<br />

Mahon, Derek. “Young Eavan and Early Boland.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review 23.1 (1993): 23–28.<br />

Mahon, Ellen M. “Eavan Boland’s Journey with the Muse.” In Deborah Fleming, ed. Learning<br />

the Trade: Essays on W.B. Yeats and Contemporary Poetry. West Cornwall, CT: Locust Hill,<br />

1993. 179–94.<br />

Matthews, Steven. “The Object Lessons of Heaney, Carson, Muldoon and Boland.” Critical<br />

Survey 15.1 (2003): 18–33.<br />

McCallum, Shara. “Eavan Boland’s Gift: Sex, History, and Myth.” Antioch Review 62.1 (2004):<br />

37–47.<br />

Paddon, Seija. “The Diversity of Performance / Performance as Diversity in the Poetry of Laura<br />

(Riding) Jackson and Eavan Boland.” ES Can 22.4 (1996): 425–39.<br />

Poloczek, Katarzyna. “Identity as Becoming: Polymorphic Female Identities in the Poetry of<br />

Boland, Meehan and Ní Dhomhnaill.” In Irene Gilsenan Nordin and Elin Holmsten, eds. Liminal<br />

Borderlands in Irish Literature and Culture. Oxford: Peter Lang, 2009. 131–50.


Raschke, Debra. “Eavan Boland’s ‘Outside History’ and ‘In a Time of Violence’: Rescuing<br />

Women, the Concrete, and Other Things Physical from the Dung Heap.” Colby Quarterly 32.2<br />

(1996): 135–42.<br />

Reizbaum, Marilyn. “What’s My Line: the Contemporaneity of Eavan Boland.” Irish <strong>University</strong><br />

Review 23.1 (1993): 100–10.<br />

Russell, Richard Rankin. “Boland’s ‘Lava Cameo.’” Explicator 60.2 (2002): 114–17.<br />

Sarbin, Deborah. “‘Out of Myth into History’: The Poetry of Eavan Boland and Eiléan Ní<br />

Chuilleanáin.” Canadian Journal of Irish Studies 19.1 (July 1993): 86–96.<br />

Shifrer, Anne. “The Fabrics and Erotics of Eavan Boland’s Poetry.” Colby Quarterly 37.4<br />

(2001): 327–42.<br />

Sullivan, Moynagh. “I am, Therefore, I am Not (Woman).” International Journal of English<br />

Studies 2.2 (2002): 123–34.<br />

Villar-Argáiz, Pilar. “Recording the Unpoetic: Eavan Boland’s Silences.” Irish <strong>University</strong><br />

Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 37.2 (2007): 472–91.<br />

___. “Witchcraft and Evilness as Sources of Female Potential: Eavan Boland’s Representation of<br />

a New Eve in Irish Poetry.” Grove: Working Papers on English Studies 14 (2007): 129–45.<br />

Weekes, Ann Owens. “‘An Origin like Water’: The Poetry of Eavan Boland and Modernist<br />

Critiques of Irish Literature.” Bucknell Review 38.1 (1994): 159–76.<br />

Wheatley, David. “Changing the Story: Eavan Boland and Literary History.” Irish Review 31<br />

(Spring-Summer 2004): 103–20.<br />

EVA BOURKE<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

Gonella. Dublin: Dedalus Press, 1985.<br />

Litany for the Pig. Dublin: Dedalus Press, 1989.<br />

Spring in Henry Street Dublin: Dedalus Press, 1996.<br />

Travels with Gandolpho. Dublin: Dedalus Press, 2000.<br />

The Latitude of Naples. Dublin: Dedalus Press, 2005.


Other Works<br />

Mit grüner Tinte / With Green Ink. Translated by Eva Bourke. Bamberg, Germany: Colibri<br />

Verlag, 1996.<br />

Borchers, Elisabeth. Winter on White Paper. Translated by Eva Bourke. Dublin: Dedalus Press,<br />

2002.<br />

MEDBH MCGUCKIAN<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

Portrait of Joanna. Belfast: Ulsterman Publications, 1980.<br />

Single Ladies. Budleigh Salteron: Interim, 1982.<br />

The Flower Master and Other Poems. Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press, 1982; Oldcastle, Co.<br />

Meath: The Gallery Press, 1982, 1993.<br />

Venus and the Rain. Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press, 1984; Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery<br />

Press, 1984, 1994.<br />

On Ballycastle Beach. Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 1988; Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1988, 1995.<br />

___ and Nuala Archer. Two Women, Two Shores: Poems by Medbh McGuckian and Nuala<br />

Archer. Baltimore, MD: New Poets Series, 1989.<br />

Marconi’s Cottage. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1991; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong><br />

<strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 1991.<br />

Captain Lavender. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1994; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong><br />

<strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 1995.<br />

Selected Poems: 1978–1994. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press; Winston-Salem, NC:<br />

<strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 1997.<br />

Shelmalier. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1998; Winston Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 1999.<br />

Drawing Ballerinas. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2001.


The Face of the Earth. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2002.<br />

Soldiers of the Year II. Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Had I a Thousand Lives. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2003.<br />

The Book of the Angel. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2004; Winston-Salem, NC:<br />

<strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2004.<br />

The Currach Requires No Harbours. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2006; Winston-<br />

Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2007.<br />

My Love Has Fared Inland. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2008; Winston-Salem, NC:<br />

<strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2010.<br />

Other Works<br />

“Don’t Talk to Me about Dance.” Poetry Ireland Review 35 (1992): 98–100.<br />

“Comhra, with a Foreward and Afterword by Laura O’Connor.” The Southern Review 31.3<br />

(Summer 1995): 581–614.<br />

“Home.” In Sophia H. King and Sean McMahon, eds. Hope and History: Eyewitness Accounts of<br />

Life in Twentieth-Century Ulster. Belfast: Friar’s Bush Press, 1996. 210–11.<br />

Horsepower Pass By!: A Study of the Car in the Poetry of Seamus Heaney. Coleraine: Cranagh<br />

Press, 1999.<br />

The Water-Horse: Poems in Irish by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill. Translated by Medbh McGuckian<br />

and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1999; Winston-Salem, NC:<br />

<strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2004.<br />

Interviews<br />

Bohman, Kimberly S. “Surfacing: An Interview with Medbh McGuckian, Belfast, 5th<br />

September, 1994.” The Irish Review 16 (Autumn/Winter 1994): 95–108.<br />

Brandes, Rand. “A Dialogue with Medbh McGuckian.” Studies in the Literary Imagination 30.2<br />

(1997): 37–61.<br />

___. “An Interview with Medbh McGuckian.” The Chattahoochee Review 16.3 (Spring 1996):<br />

56–65.<br />

McCracken, Kathleen. “An Attitude of Compassion.” Irish Literary Supplement 9.2 (Fall 1990):


20–21.<br />

McGrath, Niall. “The McGuckian Enigma: Interview with Medbh McGuckian.” Causeway<br />

(Summer 1994): 67–70.<br />

Sailer, Susan Shaw. “An Interview with Medbh McGuckian.” Michigan Review 32.1 (Winter<br />

1993): 111–27.<br />

Criticism on McGuckian<br />

Alcobia-Murphy, Shane, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of Words. Cork:<br />

Cork UP, 2010.<br />

___. “‘Re-Reading Five, Ten Times, the Simplest Letters’: Detecting Voices in the Poetry of<br />

Medbh McGuckian.” Nordic Irish Studies 5.1 (2006): 136–47.<br />

___. “‘That Now Historical Ground’: Memory and Atrocity in the Poetry of Medbh<br />

McGuckian.” In Shane Alcobia-Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of<br />

Words. Cork: Cork UP, 2010.<br />

Batten, Guinn. “‘The More With Which We are Connected’: The Muse of the Minus in the<br />

Poetry of McGuckian and Kinsella.” In Anthony Bradley and Maryann Gialanella Valiulis, eds.<br />

Gender and Sexuality in Modern Ireland. Amherst: <strong>University</strong> of Massachusetts Press, 1997.<br />

212–44.<br />

Beer, Ann. “Medbh McGuckian’s Poetry: Maternal Thinking and a Politics of Peace.” Canadian<br />

Journal of Irish Studies 18.1 (1992): 192–203.<br />

Bendell, Molly. “Flower Logic: The Poems of Medbh McGuckian.” Antioch Review 48.3<br />

(Summer 1990): 367–71.<br />

Blakeman, Helen. “‘Poetry Must Almost Dismantle the Letters’: McGuckian, Mallarmé and<br />

Polysemantic Play.” In Shane Alcobia-Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The<br />

Interior of Words. Cork: Cork UP, 2010.<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Brazeau, Robert. “Troubling Language: Avant-Garde Strategies in the Poetry of Medbh<br />

McGuckian.” Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 37.2 (2004): 127–<br />

44.<br />

Brewster, Scott. “The Space that Cleaves: The House and Hospitality in Medbh McGuckian’s<br />

Work.” In Shane Alcobia-Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of Words.<br />

Cork: Cork UP, 2010.


Cahill, Eileen. “‘Because I never garden’: Medbh McGuckian’s Solitary Way.” Irish <strong>University</strong><br />

Review 24.2 (1994): 264–71.<br />

Carville, Conor. “Warding Off an Epitaph: Had I a Thousand Lives.” In Shane Alcobia-Murphy,<br />

ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of Words. Cork: Cork UP, 2010.<br />

Clutterbuck, Catriona. “A Gibbous Voice: The Poetics of Subjectivity in the Early Poetry of<br />

Medbh McGuckian.” In Shane Alcobia-Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The<br />

Interior of Words. Cork: Cork UP, 2010.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.<br />

Denman, Peter. “Ways of Saying: Boland, Carson, McGuckian.” In Michael Kenneally, ed.<br />

Poetry in Contemporary Irish Literature. Gerrard’s Cross: Colin Smythe, 1995. 158–73.<br />

Docherty, Thomas. “Initiations, Tempers, Seductions: Postmodern McGuckian.” In Neil<br />

Corcoran, ed. The Chosen Ground: Essays on the Contemporary Poetry of Northern Ireland.<br />

Chester Springs, PA: Dufour Editions, 1992. 191–212.<br />

Faragó, Borbála. “‘The Meeting of Two Tidal Roads’: Tradition and Identity in Medbh<br />

McGuckian’s The Face of the Earth and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin's The Girl Who Married the<br />

Reindeer.” Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies 10.1–2 (2004): 331–40.<br />

___. “‘They Come Into It’: The Muses of Medbh McGuckian.” In Shane Alcobia-Murphy, ed.<br />

The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of Words. Cork: Cork UP, 2010.<br />

Flynn, Leontia. “Re-assembling the Atom: Reading Medbh McGuckian’s Intertextual Materials.”<br />

In Shane Alcobia-Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of Words. Cork:<br />

Cork UP, 2010.<br />

Grey, Cecile. “Medbh McGuckian: Imagery Wrought to its Uttermost.” In Deborah Fleming, ed.<br />

Learning the Trade: Essays on W.B. Yeats and Contemporary Poetry. West Cornwall, CT:<br />

Locust Hill, 1993. 165–77.<br />

Haberstroh, Patricia Boyle. “Medbh McGuckian.” Women Creating Women. Syracuse: Syracuse<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 1996. 123–58.<br />

Hipp, Shannon. “‘Things of the Same Kind That Are Separated Only by Time’: Reading the<br />

Notebooks of Medbh McGuckian.” Irish <strong>University</strong> Review: A Journal of Irish Studies 39.1<br />

(2009): 130–48.<br />

Holmsten, Elin. “Signs of Encounters in Medbh McGuckian’s Poetry.” In Shane Alcobia-<br />

Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of Words. Cork: Cork UP, 2010.


Kirkland, Richard. “Medbh McGuckian and the Politics of Minority Discourse.” In Shane<br />

Alcobia-Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of Words. Cork: Cork UP,<br />

2010.<br />

Mallot, J. Edward. “Medbh McGuckian’s Poetic Tectonics.” Eire-Ireland: A Journal of Irish<br />

Studies 40.3–4 (2005): 240–55.<br />

Mitchell, Erin C. “Slippage at the Threshold: Postmodern Hospitality in Medbh McGuckian’s<br />

Poetry.” Literature Interpretation Theory 17.2 (2006): 137–55.<br />

Murphy, Shane. “Obliquity in the Poetry of Paul Muldoon and Medbh McGuckian.” Eire-<br />

Ireland 31.3–4 (1996): 76–101.<br />

O’Brien, Peggy. “Reading Medbh McGuckian: Admiring What We Cannot Understand.” Colby<br />

Quarterly 37.4 (December 1992): 239–50.<br />

O’Connor, Mary. “‘Rising Out’: Medbh McGuckian’s Destabilizing Poetics.” Eire-Ireland 30.4<br />

(Winter 1996): 154–72.<br />

Porter, Mary. “The Imaginative Space of Medbh McGuckian.” In Anne Brown and Maryanne<br />

Gooze, eds. International Women’s Writing: New Landscapes of Identity. Westport, CT:<br />

Greenwood, 1995. 86–101.<br />

Porter, Susan. “‘The Imaginative Space’ of Medbh McGuckian.” Canadian Journal of Irish<br />

Studies 15.2 (1989): 93–104.<br />

Schrage-Früh, Michaela. “Speaking as the North: Self and Place in the Early Poetry of Medbh<br />

McGuckian.” In Shane Alcobia-Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The Interior of<br />

Words. Cork: Cork UP, 2010.<br />

Sirr, Peter. “‘How Things Begin to Happen’: Notes on Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and Medbh<br />

McGuckian.” The Southern Review 31.3 (Summer 1995): 450–67.<br />

Sullivan, Moynagh. “Dreamin’ My Dreams of You: Medbh McGuckian and the Theatre of<br />

Dreams.” Metre 17 (Spring 2005).<br />

Thompson, Zoë Brigley. “The Life and Death of Language: A Kristevan Reading of the Poets<br />

Gwyneth Lewis and Medbh McGuckian.” Orbis Litterarum: International Review of Literary<br />

Studies 64.5 (2009): 385–412.<br />

Wills, Clair. “Coda.” In Shane Alcobia-Murphy, ed. The Poetry of Medbh McGuckian: The<br />

Interior of Words. Cork: Cork UP, 2010.<br />

___. Improprieties: Politics and Sexuality in Northern Irish Poetry. Oxford: Clarendon Press,<br />

1993.


___. “The Perfect Mother: Authority in the Poetry of Medbh McGuckian.” Text and Context 3<br />

(Autumn 1988): 91–111.<br />

___. “Voices from the Nursery: Medbh McGuckian’s Plantation.” In Michael Kenneally, ed.<br />

Poetry in Contemporary Irish Literature. Gerrard’s Cross: Colin Smythe, 1995. 373–94.<br />

KERRY HARDIE<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

A Furious Place. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1996.<br />

Cry for the Hot Belly. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2000.<br />

The Sky Didn’t Fall. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2003.<br />

The Silence Came Close. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2006.<br />

Only This Room. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2009.<br />

Other Works<br />

Hannie Bennet’s Winter Marriage. London: Harper Collins, 2000.<br />

The Bird Woman. London: Harper Collins, 2006.<br />

Criticism on Hardie<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

NUALA NÍ DHOMHNAILL<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

An Dealg Droighin. Cork: The Mercier Press, 1981.<br />

Féar Suaithinseach. Ma Nuat (Maynooth): An Sagart, 1984.<br />

Rogha Danta / Selected Poems. Translated by Michael Hartnett and Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.


Dublin: Raven Arts Press, 1986.<br />

Pharaoh’s Daughter. Translated by Ciaran Carson et. al. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery<br />

Press, 1990; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 1990.<br />

The Astrakhan Cloak. Translated by Paul Muldoon. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press,<br />

1992; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 1993.<br />

Cead Aighnis. An Daingean: An Sagart, 1998.<br />

The Water Horse. Translated by Medbh McGuckian and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin. Oldcastle, Co.<br />

Meath: The Gallery Press, 1999; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2000.<br />

The Fifty Minute Mermaid. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2007.<br />

Other Works<br />

Jimín. Dublin: Deilt Productions, 1985. (play for children)<br />

An Ollphiast Ghránna. Dublin: Deilt Productions, 1987. (play for children)<br />

“Making the Millenium: Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill in Conversation with Michael Cronin.” Dublin:<br />

Graph I, 1986.<br />

An Goban Saor. Ilanna Productions, 1993. (screenplay)<br />

An T-Anam Mothala / The Feeling Soul. Ocean Productions, RTE, 1994. (screenplay)<br />

Destination Demain. Paris: GES, 1993. (play for children)<br />

The Wooing of Éadaoin. National Chambre Choir, 1994. (libretto)<br />

“Comhra, with a Foreward and Afterward by Laura O’Connor.” The Southern Review 31.3<br />

(Summer 1995): 581–614.<br />

‘Jumping off Shadows’: Selected Contemporary Irish Poets. Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and Greg<br />

Delanty, eds. Preface by Philip O’Leary. Cork: Cork <strong>University</strong> Press, 1995.<br />

“Why I Choose to Write in Irish, The Corpse That Sits Up and Talks Back.” The New York<br />

Times Book Review 8 January 1995: 26–28.<br />

“What Foremothers?” In T. O’Connor, ed. The Comic Tradition in Irish Women Writers.<br />

Gainesville: <strong>University</strong> of Florida Press, 1996. 8–10.<br />

“The Hidden Ireland: Women’s Inheritance.” In Theo Dorgan, ed. Irish Poetry since Kavanagh.


Blackrock, Co. Dublin: Four Courts Press, 1996.<br />

“Introduction.” In Eilís Nic Dhuibhne, ed. Voices in the Wind: Women Poets of the Celtic<br />

Twilight. Dublin: New Island Books, 1995.<br />

Interviews<br />

Consalvo, Deborah McWilliams. “An Interview with Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” Studies 83.331<br />

(Autumn 1994): 313–20.<br />

McDiarmid, Lucy and Michael Durkan. “Q & A: Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” Irish Literary<br />

Supplement 6.2 (Fall 1987): 41–43.<br />

Wilson, Rebecca E. “An Interview with Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” In Rebecca Wilson and Gillean<br />

Somerville-Arjat, eds. Sleeping With Monsters: Conversations with Scottish and Irish Women<br />

Poets. Dublin: Wolfhound Press, 1990. 148–57.<br />

Criticism on Ní Dhomhnaill<br />

Bourke, Angela. “Fairies and Anorexia: Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill’s ‘Amazing Grass.’” Proceedings<br />

of the Harvard Celtic Colloquium 13 (1993): 25–38.<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Broom, Sarah. “‘A Spirit in the Wilderness’: Myth and Fairy Legend in the Poetry of Nuala Ní<br />

Dhomhnaill.” New Comparison: A Journal of Comparative and General Literary Studies 27–28<br />

(Spring-Autumn 1999): 325–43.<br />

Cannon, M. Louise. “The Extraordinary Within the Ordinary: The Poetry of Eavan Boland and<br />

Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.’ South Atlantic Review 60.2 (May 1995): 31–46.<br />

Consalvo, Deborah McWilliams. “Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” In Alexander Gonzalez, ed. Modern<br />

Irish Writers: A Bio-Critical Sourcebook. London: Aldwych Press, 1997. 278–82.<br />

___. “Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill: Adaptations and Transformations A Second Glance: Bilingualism in<br />

Twentieth Century Ireland.” Studies 83.331 (Autumn 1994): 303–12.<br />

___. “The Lingual Ideal in the Poetry of Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” Eire-Ireland 30.2 (Summer<br />

1995): 148–61.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.


Drabble, Margaret and Jenny Stringer. “Ní Dhomnaill, Nuala.” The Concise Oxford Companion<br />

to English Literature. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2003.<br />

Gilsenan Nordin, Irene. “Crossing the Threshold of Language: Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and the<br />

Speaking Subject.” Nordic Irish Studies 3 (2004): 51–64.<br />

Haberstroh, Patricia Boyle. “Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” Women Creating Women. Syracuse:<br />

Syracuse <strong>University</strong> Press, 1996. 161–95.<br />

Holdridge, Jefferson. “The One Loved Form: Nature, Myth, and Instinct in Irish Literature.”<br />

Writing Modern Ireland: South Carolina Review, A Special Number 43.1 (Fall 2010): 238–52.<br />

Kidd, Helen. “Cailleachs, Keens and Queens: Reconfiguring Gender and Nationality in the<br />

Poetry of Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and Eavan Boland.” Critical Survey 15<br />

(2003): 34–47.<br />

Mac Giolla Leith, Caoimhin. “Contemporary Poetry in Irish: Private Language and Ancestral<br />

Voices.” In Michael Kenneally, ed. Poetry in Contemporary Irish Literature. Gerrard’s Cross:<br />

Colin Smythe, 1995. 84–98.<br />

Murphy, Maureen. “Folklore in the Poetry of Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” In Toshi Furomoto, George<br />

Hughes, Chizuko Inoue, James McElwaine, Peter McMillan, and Tetsuro Sano, eds.<br />

International Aspects of Irish Literature. Gerrard’s Cross: Colin Smythe, 1996. 14–23.<br />

___. “The Irish Elegiac Tradition in the Poetry of Maire Mhac an tSaoi, Caitlin Maude, and<br />

Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” In James Brophy and Eamon Grennan, eds. New Irish Writing. Boston:<br />

GK Hall, 1989. 141–51.<br />

Myers, Kimberly. “Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and Women’s Sensual Spirituality.” In Kristina K.<br />

Groover, ed. Things of the Spirit: Women Writers Constructing Spirituality. Notre Dame, IN: U<br />

of Notre Dame Press, 2004. 304–28.<br />

Ni Fhrighil, Riona. “Faitios Imni an Scathaithe: Eavan Boland agus Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” New<br />

Hibernia Review/Iris Eireannach Nua: A Quarterly Record of Irish Studies 6.4 (Winter 2002):<br />

136–49.<br />

O’Connor, Mary. “Breaking the Rules: Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill’s Language Strategies.” In John C.<br />

Hawley, ed. Cross-Addressing: Resistance Literature and Cultural Borders. Albany, NY: State<br />

U of New York Press, 1996. 67–85.<br />

___. “Lashings of the Mother Tongue: Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill’s Anarchic Laughter.” In Theresa<br />

O’Connor, ed. The Comic Tradition in Irish Women Writers. Gainesville, LA: <strong>University</strong> of<br />

Florida Press, 1996. 149–70.<br />

Ó Tuama, Seán. “‘The Loving and Terrible Mother’ in the Early Poetry of Nuala Ní<br />

Dhomhnaill.” Repossessions: Selected Essays on the Irish Literary Heritage. Cork: Cork


<strong>University</strong> Press, 1995. 35–53.<br />

Potts, Donna L. “‘When Ireland Was Still Under a Spell’: The Poetry of Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.”<br />

New Hibernia Review/Iris Eireannach Nua: A Quarterly Record of Irish Studies 7.3 (Autumn<br />

2003): 52–70.<br />

Revie, Linda. “The Little Red Fox, Emblem of the Irish Peasant in Poems by Yeats, Tynan and<br />

Ní Dhomhnaill.” In Deborah Fleming, ed. Learning the Trade: Essays on W.B. Yeats and<br />

Contemporary Poetry. West Cornwall, CT: Locust Hill, 1993. 113–33.<br />

___. “Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill’s ‘Parthenogenesis’: A Bisexual Exchange.” In Michael Kenneally,<br />

ed. Poetry in Contemporary Irish Literature. Gerrard’s Cross: Colin Smythe, 1995. 344–55.<br />

Romanets, Maryna. “The (Translato)Logic of Spectrality: Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and Her English<br />

Doubles.” In Irene Gilsenan Nordin and Elin Erin Holmsten, ed. Liminal Borderlands in Irish<br />

Literature and Culture. Oxford, England: Peter Lang, 2008. 173–96.<br />

Schrage-Früh, Michaela. “‘So Much Psychic Land […] to Reclaim’: Otherworldly Encounters in<br />

Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill’s Poetry.” In Irene Gilsenan Nordin and Elin Erin Holmsten, ed. Liminal<br />

Borderlands in Irish Literature and Culture. Oxford, England: Peter Lang, 2008. 151–72.<br />

Sewell, Frank. “Irish Mythology in the Early Poetry of Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill.” Hungarian<br />

Journal of English and American Studies 8 (Spring 2002): 39–56.<br />

MARY O’MALLEY<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

A Consideration of Silk. Galway: Salmon Publishing, 1990.<br />

Where the Rocks Float. Galway: Salmon, 1993.<br />

The Knife in the Wave. Co. Clare: Salmon, 1997.<br />

Asylum Road. Galway: Salmon Publishing, 2001.<br />

The Boning Hall: New and Selected Poems. Manchester: Carcanet, 2002.<br />

A Perfect V. Manchester: Carcanet, 2006.<br />

Criticism on O’Malley


Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.<br />

Olszewska, Kinga. “The Limits of Post-Nationalism: The Works of John Banville and Mary<br />

O’Malley.” Nordic Irish Studies 7 (2008): 135–46.<br />

Wall, Eamonn. “Tracing the Poetry of Mary O’Malley.” Writing the Irish West: Ecologies and<br />

Traditions. South Bend: <strong>University</strong> of Notre Dame, 2011.<br />

Wall, Eamonn. “From Macchu Picchu to Inis Mor: The Poetry of Mary O’Malley.” South<br />

Carolina Review 38 (2005): 118–27.<br />

RITA ANN HIGGINS<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

Goddess on the Mervue Bus. Galway: Salmon, 1986.<br />

Witch in the Bushes. Galway: Salmon, 1988.<br />

Goddess and Witch. Galway: Salmon, 1990.<br />

Philomena’s Revenge. Galway: Salmon, 1992.<br />

Higher Purchase. Co. Clare: Salmon, 1996.<br />

Sunnyside Plucked: New and Selected Poems. Newcastle upon Tyne: Bloodaxe, 1996.<br />

An Awful Racket. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2001.<br />

Throw in the Vowels: New and Selected Poems. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2005.<br />

Other Works<br />

Face Licker Come Home. 1991.<br />

God of the Hatch Man. 1992.<br />

Colie Lally Doesn’t Live in a Bucket. 1993.<br />

Down All the Roundabouts. 1999.


The Big Break. 2004.<br />

Down All the Roundabouts. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2005.<br />

The Plastic Bag. 2008.<br />

The Empty Frame. 2008.<br />

The Plastic Bag. 2008.<br />

Criticism on Higgins<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Bourke, Eoin. “Poetic Outrage: Aspects of Social Criticism in Modern Irish Poetry.” In Donald<br />

E. Morse, et. al., eds. A Small Nation’s Contribution to the World. Gerrard’s Cross: Colin<br />

Smythe, 1993: 88–106.<br />

Hildebidle, John. “‘I’ll have to Stop Thinking About Sex’: Rita Ann Higgins and the Patriarchal<br />

Tradition.” In Alexander G. Gonzalez, ed. Contemporary Irish Women Poets: Some Male<br />

Perspectives. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1999. 33–41.<br />

Paul, Catherine. “Rita Ann Higgins: A Moderator’s View.” South Carolina Review 32.1 (1999):<br />

12–14.<br />

Steele, Karen. “Devil in the Mirror.” Irish Literary Supplement: A Review of Irish Books 20.2<br />

(2001): 15–16.<br />

___. “Refusing the Poisoned Chalice: The Sexual Politics of Rita Ann Higgins and Paula<br />

Meehan.” In Catherine Wiley and Fiona Barnes, eds. Homemaking: Women Writers and the<br />

Politics and Poetics of Home. New York: Garland, 1996. 312–33.<br />

Sullivan, Moynagh. “Assertive Subversions: Comedy in the Works of Julie O’Callaghan and<br />

Rita Ann Higgins.” Verse 16.2: 83–86.<br />

Paula Meehan<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

Return and No Blame. Donnybrook: Beaver Row, 1984.


Reading the Sky. Donnybrook: Beaver Row, 1986.<br />

The Man Who Was Marked by Winter. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1991; Cheney,<br />

WA: Eastern Washington <strong>University</strong> Press, 1994.<br />

Pillow Talk, Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1994.<br />

Mysteries of the Home: Selected Poems. Newcastle Upon Tyne: Bloodaxe Books, 1996.<br />

Dharmakaya. Manchester: Carcanet, 2000; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press,<br />

2002.<br />

Painting Rain. Manchester: Carcanet, 2009; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press,<br />

2009.<br />

Other Works<br />

Mrs. Sweeney, First Plays. Siobhan Bourke, ed. Dublin: New Island Books, 1999.<br />

Cell: a play. Dublin: New Island Books, 2000.<br />

The Garden of Eden. Radio play, 2011.<br />

Interviews<br />

Dorgan, Theo. “An Interview with Paula Meehan.” Colby Quarterly 28.4 (Dec. 1992): 265–69.<br />

Sperry, Amanda. “An Interview with Paula Meehan.” <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Website,<br />

November 2008.<br />

http://www.wfu.edu/wfupress/An%20interview%20with%20Paula%20Meehan.html<br />

Criticism on Meehan<br />

Allen Randolph, Jody. “Paula Meehan: A Selected Bibliography.” An Sionnach: A Journal of<br />

Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 272–301.<br />

http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/an_sionnach/v005/5.1.randolph02.pdf<br />

___. “Text and Context: Paula Meehan.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the<br />

Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 5–17.<br />

Auge, Andrew. “The Apparitions of ‘Our Lady of the Facts of Life’: Paula Meehan and the<br />

Visionary Quotidian.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009):<br />

50–64.


Boland, Eavan. “Unfinished Business: The Communal Art of Paula Meehan.” An Sionnach: A<br />

Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 17–24.<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Collins, Lucy. “A Way of Going Back: Memory and Estrangement in the Poetry of Paula<br />

Meehan.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 127–39.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.<br />

Falci, Eric. “Meehan’s Stanzas and the Irish Lyric after Yeats.” An Sionnach: A Journal of<br />

Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 226–238.<br />

Fogarty, Anne. “‘Hear Me and Have Pity’: Rewriting Elegy in the Poetry of Paula Meehan.” An<br />

Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 213–25.<br />

González-Arias, Luz Mar. “In Dublin’s Fair City: Citified Embodiments in Paula Meehan’s<br />

Urban Landscapes.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009):<br />

34–49.<br />

Holdridge, Jefferson. “The Wolf Tree: Culture and Nature in Paula Meehan’s Dharmakaya and<br />

Painting Rain.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 156–<br />

68.<br />

Jackson, Eileen Deen. “The Lyricism of Abjection in Paula Meehan’s Drama of Imprisonment.”<br />

An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 169–79.<br />

Kirkpatrick, Kathryn J. “‘A Murmuration of Starlings in a Rowan Tree’: Finding Gary Snyder in<br />

Paula Meehan’s Eco-Political Poetics.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the<br />

Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 195–207.<br />

___. “‘Between Breath and No Breath’: Witnessing Class Trauma in Paula Meehan’s<br />

Dharmakaya.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 47–64.<br />

McCarthy, Thomas. “‘None of Us Well Fixed’: Empathy and Its Aesthetic Power in Paula<br />

Meehan’s Poetry.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009):<br />

65–74.<br />

McMullen, Kim. “‘Snatch a Song from a Stranger’s Mouth’: The Stage Plays and Radio Dramas<br />

of Paula Meehan.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009):<br />

90–113.<br />

Mulhall, Anne. “Memory, Poetry, and Recovery: Paula Meehan’s Transformational Aesthetics.”<br />

An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009): 142–55.


O'Malley, Mary. “City Centre.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–<br />

2 (2009): 27–33.<br />

Poloczek, Katarzyna. “‘Sharing Our Differences’: Individuality and Community in the Early<br />

Work of Paula Meehan.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2<br />

(2009): 75–89.<br />

Schrage-Früh, Michaela. “‘Transforming That Past’: The Healing Power of Dreams in Paula<br />

Meehan’s Poetry.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2 (2009):<br />

114–26.<br />

Steele, Karen. “Refusing the Poisoned Chalice: The Sexual Politics of Rita Ann Higgins and<br />

Paula Meehan.” In Catherine Wiley and Fiona Barnes, eds. Homemaking: Women Writers and<br />

the Politics and Poetics of Home. New York: Garland, 1996. 312–33.<br />

Villar-Argáiz, Pilar. “‘Act Locally, Think Globally’: Paula Meehan’s Local Commitment and<br />

Global Consciousness.” An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, Culture, and the Arts 5.1–2<br />

(2009): 180–93.<br />

MOYA CANNON<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

Oar. Galway: Salmon, 1990; Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2000.<br />

The Parchment Boat. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1997.<br />

Carrying the Songs. Manchester: Carcanet Press, 2007.<br />

Hands. Manchester: Carcanet Press, forthcoming in 2011.<br />

Other Works<br />

Cúm: An Anthology of New Writing from Co. Kerry. Ed. Moya Cannon. Co. Kerry: Kerry Co.<br />

Council, 1996.<br />

Criticism on Cannon<br />

Armstrong, Jeanne. “Otherworld Landscapes: An Appreciation of Moya Cannon’s Poetry.”<br />

Working Papers in Irish Studies 6.4 (2006): 1–37.


Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Cusick, Christine. “‘Our Language Was Tidal’: Moya Cannon’s Poetics of Place.” New Hibernia<br />

Review/Iris Eireannach Nua: A Quarterly Record of Irish Studies 9.1 (2005): 59–76.<br />

Fluharty, Matthew, Nigel McLoughlin, and Frank Sewell. Breaking the Skin: 21 st Century Irish<br />

Writing, Volume Two: New Irish Poetry. Ballyclare: Black Mountain Press, 2002.<br />

Holdridge, Jefferson. “Introduction.” <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> Series of Irish Poetry, Vol. 2. Winston-Salem,<br />

NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2010.<br />

Quinn, Justin. The Cambridge Introduction to Modern Irish Poetry, 1800–2000. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge UP, 2008.<br />

Wall, Eamonn. “Carrying the Songs: The Poetry of Moya Cannon.” Writing the Irish West:<br />

Ecologies and Traditions. South Bend: <strong>University</strong> of Notre Dame, 2011.<br />

KATIE DONOVAN<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

Watermelon Man. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Bloodaxe, 1993.<br />

Entering the Mare. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 1997.<br />

Day of the Dead. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2002.<br />

Rootling. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2010.<br />

VONA GROARKE<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

Shale. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 1994.<br />

Other People’s Houses. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2000.<br />

Flight. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2002.<br />

Flight and Earlier Poems. Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2004.


Juniper Street. Oldcastle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2006; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong><br />

<strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2006.<br />

Spindrift. Oldcasle, Co. Meath: The Gallery Press, 2009; Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2010.<br />

Criticism on Groarke<br />

Archambeau, Robert. “Postnational Ireland.” Contemporary Literature 50.3 (Fall 2009): 610–18.<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vol.s 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Clutterbuck, Catriona. “New Irish Women Poets: The Evolution of (In)determinacy in Vona<br />

Groarke.” In Fran Brearton and Alan Gillis, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish Poetry.<br />

Oxford: Oxford UP, forthcoming.<br />

Coughlan, Patricia. “‘The Whole Strange Growth’: Heaney, Orpheus and Women.” The Irish<br />

Review 35 (Summer 2007): 25–45.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.<br />

Fluharty, Matthew, Nigel McLoughlin and Frank Sewell. Breaking the Skin: 21 st Century Irish<br />

Writing, Volume Two: New Irish Poetry. Ballyclare: Black Mountain Press, 2002.<br />

Guinness, Selina. The New Irish Poets. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2004.<br />

Holdridge, Jefferson. “Landscape, Family and Home in Some Contemporary Irish Writers.”<br />

NAE: Trimestrale De Cultura 5.17 (2006): 39–45.<br />

Quinn, Justin. The Cambridge Introduction to Modern Irish Poetry, 1800–2000. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge UP, 2008.<br />

ENDA WYLEY<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

Eating Baby Jesus. Dublin: Dedalus Press, 1994.<br />

Socrates in the Garden. Dublin: Dedalus Press, 1998.<br />

Poems for Breakfast. Dublin: Dedalus Press, 2004.


To <strong>Wake</strong> to This. Dublin: Dedalus Press, 2009.<br />

Other Works<br />

Boo and Bear. Dublin: O’Brien Press, 2004.<br />

The Secret Notebook. Dublin: O’Brien Press, 2007.<br />

I Won’t Go to China. Dublin: O’Brien Press, 2009.<br />

SINÉAD MORRISSEY<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

There was a Fire in Vancouver. Manchester: Carcanet, 1996.<br />

Between Here and There. Manchester: Carcanet, 2002.<br />

The State of the Prisons. Manchester: Carcanet, 2005.<br />

Through a Square Window. Manchester: Carcanet, 2009.<br />

Criticism on Morrissey<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Brett, Louise. “The In-Between Territory of Sinéad Morrissey’s Japanese Influence.” In Maeve<br />

Tynan, Maria Belville and Marita Ryan, eds. Passages: Movements and Moments in Text and<br />

Theory. Newcastle upon Tyne, England: Cambridge Scholars, 2009. 49–62.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.<br />

Fluharty, Matthew, Nigel McLoughlin and Frank Sewell. Breaking the Skin: 21 st Century Irish<br />

Writing, Volume Two: New Irish Poetry. Ballyclare: Black Mountain Press, 2002.<br />

Guinness, Selina. The New Irish Poets. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2004.<br />

Holdridge, Jefferson. “Introduction.” <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> Series of Irish Poetry, Vol. 1. Winston-Salem,<br />

NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2005.<br />

Howard, Ben. “In Sunlight and in Shadow.” Sewanee Review 17.4 (Fall 2009): 665–69.


Kennedy-Andrews, Elmer. Writing Home: Poetry and Place in Northern Ireland, 1968–2008.<br />

Cambridge, England: Brewer, 2008.<br />

Poloczek, Katarzyna. “Ironies of Language and Signs of Existence in Contemporary Irish<br />

Women’s Poetry: Sinead Morrissey’s Between Here and There, Paula Meehan’s Dharmakaya<br />

and Eavan Boland’s Code.” In Liliana Sikorska, ed. Ironies of Art/Tragedies of Life. Frankfurt,<br />

Germany: Peter Lang, 2005. 275–300.<br />

Quinn, Justin. The Cambridge Introduction to Modern Irish Poetry, 1800–2000. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge UP, 2008.<br />

Reed, Brian. “She Follows Them How Else? By Flying.” Contemporary Literature 48.3 (Fall<br />

2007): 460–67.<br />

CAITRÍONA O’REILLY<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

The Nowhere Birds. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2001.<br />

Three-Legged Dog. Dublin: Wild Honey Press, 2002.<br />

The Sea Cabinet. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2006.<br />

The <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> Series of Irish Poetry, Vol. 1. Winston-Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

Press, 2005.<br />

Criticism on O’Reilly<br />

Bourke, Angela, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Vols. 4 & 5. Cork: Cork<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2002; New York: New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002.<br />

Fluharty, Matthew, Nigel McLoughlin and Frank Sewell. Breaking the Skin: 21 st Century Irish<br />

Writing, Volume Two: New Irish Poetry. Ballyclare: Black Mountain Press, 2002.<br />

Guinness, Selina. The New Irish Poets. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2004.<br />

Holdridge, Jefferson. “Introduction.” The <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> Series of Irish Poetry, Vol. 1. Winston-<br />

Salem, NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2005.<br />

___. “Reclaiming the Wilderness: Nature and Perception in Caitríona O’Reilly.” Etudes<br />

Irlandaises 31.1 (Spring 2006): 11–25.


Quinn, Justin. The Cambridge Introduction to Modern Irish Poetry, 1800–2000. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge UP, 2008.<br />

LEONTIA FLYNN<br />

Volumes of Poetry<br />

These Days. London: Cape, 2004.<br />

Drives. London: Cape, 2008.<br />

Criticism on Flynn<br />

Fluharty, Matthew, Nigel McLoughlin and Frank Sewell. Breaking the Skin: 21 st Century Irish<br />

Writing, Volume Two: New Irish Poetry. Ballyclare: Black Mountain Press, 2002.<br />

Guinness, Selina. The New Irish Poets. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2004.<br />

Kennedy-Andrews, Elmer. Writing Home: Poetry and Place in Northern Ireland, 1968–2008.<br />

Cambridge: Brewer, 2008.<br />

Lyon, John. “Thought Potatoes.” PN Review 31.4 (2005): 66–67.<br />

Quinn, Justin. The Cambridge Introduction to Modern Irish Poetry, 1800–2000. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge UP, 2008.<br />

Yeh, Jane. “Leontia Flynn.” Times Literary Supplement 18 July 2010.<br />

GENERAL CRITICISM AND REFERENCES<br />

Agee, Chris, ed. The New North: Contemporary Poetry from Northern Ireland. Winston-Salem,<br />

NC: <strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press, 2008.<br />

Alison, Jonathan. “Poetry from the Irish.” Irish Literary Supplement 10.1 (1991): 14.<br />

Andrews, Elmer, ed. Contemporary Irish Poetry: A Collection of Critical Essays. London:


Macmillan, 1990.<br />

Archer, Nuala, ed. “Women Alone.” Midland Review 3.50 (1986). (special issue on Irish women<br />

writers)<br />

Beale, Jenny. Women in Ireland: Voices of Change. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1986.<br />

Bedient, Calvin. “The Crabbed Genius of Belfast.” Parnassus: Poetry in Review 16.1: 195–210.<br />

Bourke, Angela. “More in Anger than in Sorrow: Irish Women’s Lament Poetry.” In Joan<br />

Newlon Radner, ed. Feminist Messages. Urbana: <strong>University</strong> of Illinois Press, 1993. 160–82.<br />

___. “Performing—not Writing.” Graph 11 (1991–92): 28–31.<br />

___. “The Virtual Reality of Irish Fairy Legend.” Eire-Ireland 31.1–2 (1996): 7–25.<br />

___. “Working and Weeping: Women’s Oral Poetry in Irish and Scottish Gaelic Poetry.”<br />

Women’s Studies Working Papers. Dublin: UCD Women’s Studies Forum, 1988.<br />

Bourke, Eva and Borbála Faragó, eds. Landing Places: Immigrant Poets in Ireland. Dublin:<br />

Dedalus Press, 2010.<br />

Brady, Anne M. Women in Ireland: An Annotated Bibliography. Westport, CT: Greenwood,<br />

1988.<br />

Bradley, Anthony. “The Irishness of Irish Poetry after Yeats.” In James D. Brophy and Eamon<br />

Grennan, eds. New Irish Writing. Boston: G.K. Hall, 1989. 1–12.<br />

Bradley, Anthony and Maryann Gialanella Valiulis. Gender and Sexuality in Modern Ireland.<br />

Amherst: <strong>University</strong> of Massachusetts Press, 1997.<br />

Brophy, James D. and Eamon Grennan, eds. New Irish Writing. Boston: GK Hall, 1989.<br />

Caldecott, Moyra. Women in Celtic Myth. Rochester, VT: Destiny Books, 1988.<br />

Campbell, Matthew, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Contemporary Irish Poetry. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge UP, 2003.<br />

Clark, Rosalind. The Great Queens: Irish Goddesses from the Mórrigan to Cathleen Ní<br />

Houlihan. Gerrard’s Cross: Colin Smythe, 1991.<br />

Clifton, Harry. “Real and Synthetic Whiskey: A Generation of Irish Poets, 1975–1987.” In James<br />

D. Brophy and Eamon Grennan, eds. New Irish Writing. Boston: GK Hall, 1989. 232–47.<br />

Clutterbuck, Catriona. “Gender and Self-Representation in Irish Poetry: The Critical Debate.”<br />

Bullán 4.1 (Autumn 1998).


Condren, Mary. The Serpent and the Goddess: Women, Religion and Power in Celtic Ireland.<br />

New York: Harper and Row, 1989.<br />

Corcoran, Neil. The Chosen Ground: Essays on the Contemporary Poetry of Northern Ireland.<br />

Chester Springs, PA: Dufour, 1992.<br />

___. After Yeats and Joyce: Reading Modern Irish Literature. Oxford: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press,<br />

1997.<br />

Coulter, Carol. “‘Hello Divorce, Goodbye Daddy’: Women, Gender, and the Divorce Debate.” In<br />

Anthony Bradley and Maryann Gialanella Valiulis, eds. Gender and Sexuality in Modern<br />

Ireland. Amherst: <strong>University</strong> of Massachusetts Press, 1997. 275–98.<br />

Curtin, Chris, Pauline Jackson and Barbara O’Connor, eds. Gender in Irish Society. Galway:<br />

Galway <strong>University</strong> Press, 1987.<br />

Davis, Wes. An Anthology of Modern Irish Poetry. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2010.<br />

Deane, Seamus, ed. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing. Derry: Field Day Publications,<br />

1991.<br />

Deane, Seamus and Angela Bourke, et. al., eds. The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing. 5 vols.<br />

Derry: Field Day Publications, 1991, 2002.<br />

Donovan, Katie. Irish Women Writers: Marginalized by Whom? Dublin: Raven Arts, 1988.<br />

Fallon, Peter. “Notes on a History of Publishing Poetry.” Princeton <strong>University</strong> Library Chronicle<br />

59.3 (Spring 1998): 546–58.<br />

Fluharty, Matthew, Nigel McLoughlin and Frank Sewell. Breaking the Skin: 21 st Century Irish<br />

Writing, Volume Two: New Irish Poetry. Ballyclare: Black Mountain Press, 2002.<br />

Garrett, Robert F. “The Place of Writing and the Writing of Place in Twentieth-Century Irish<br />

Poetry in English.” In Hans Werner Ludwig, et. al., eds. Poetry in the British Isles: Non-<br />

Metropolitan Perspectives. Swansea: <strong>University</strong> of Wales Press, 1995. 173–92.<br />

Gonzalez, Alexander G., ed. Contemporary Irish Women Poets: Some Male Perspectives.<br />

Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1999.<br />

Goodby, John. Irish Poetry Since 1950: From Stillness Into History. Manchester: Manchester<br />

UP, 2000.<br />

Grennan, Eamon. Facing the Music: Irish Poetry in the Twentieth Century. Omaha, NE:<br />

Creighton <strong>University</strong> Press, 1999.


Guinness, Selina. The New Irish Poets. Tarcet: Bloodaxe, 2004.<br />

Haberstroh, Patricia Boyle, ed. My Self, My Muse: Irish Women Poets Reflect on Life and Art.<br />

New York: Syracuse <strong>University</strong> Press, 2001.<br />

Haberstroh, Patricia Boyle. “Literary Politics: Mainstream and Margin.” Canadian Journal of<br />

Irish Studies 18.1 (1992): 181–91.<br />

___. Women Creating Women: Contemporary Irish Women Poets. Syracuse: Syracuse<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 1996.<br />

Hannon, Dennis J. and Nancy Means Wright. “Irish Women Poets: Breaking the Silence.”<br />

Canadian Journal of Irish Studies 16.2 (1990): 57–65.<br />

Henigan, Robert. “Contemporary Women Poets in Ireland.” Concerning Poetry 18.1–2 (1985):<br />

103–15.<br />

Henry, P.L., ed. Dánta Ban: Poems of Irish Women, Early and Modern. Dublin: Mercier, 1990.<br />

Herr, Cheryl. “The Erotics of Irishness.” Critical Inquiry 17 (1990): 1–34.<br />

Hogan, Robert. The Dictionary of Irish Literature (revised and updated second edition, twovolume<br />

set). London: Aldwych Press, 1997.<br />

Innes, L. Women and Nation in Irish Literature. London: Harvester, 1993.<br />

Johnson, Toni O’Brien and David Cairns. Gender in Irish Writing. Milton Keynes and<br />

Philadelphia: Open <strong>University</strong> Press, 1991.<br />

Johnston, Dillon. Irish Poetry After Joyce. South Bend, IN: Notre Dame <strong>University</strong> Press, 1985;<br />

2d ed., rev. Syracuse: Syracuse <strong>University</strong> Press, 1997.<br />

___. “Next to Nothing: Uses of the Otherworld in Modern Irish Literature.” In James Brophy and<br />

Eamon Grennan, eds. New Irish Writing. Boston: G.K. Hall, 1989.<br />

___. The Poetic Economies of England and Ireland 1912–2000. London: Palgrave-Macmillan,<br />

2001.<br />

___. “<strong>Wake</strong> <strong>Forest</strong> <strong>University</strong> Press: Some Reflections.” Princeton <strong>University</strong> Library Chronicle<br />

59.3 (Spring 1998): 581–93.<br />

Kelleher, Margaret and Philip O’Leary, eds. The Cambridge History of Irish Literature, Vol. 2.<br />

Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2006.<br />

Kiberd, Declan and Gabriel Fitzmaurice, eds. An Crann Faoi Bláth: The Flowering Tree:<br />

Contemporary Irish Poetry with Verse Translations. Dublin: Wolfhound Press, 1991.


Kinsella, Thomas. The Dual Tradition: An Essay on Poetry and Politics in Ireland. Manchester:<br />

Carcanet, 1995.<br />

Kinsella, Thomas and Seán Ó’Tuama. An Duanaire 1600–1900: Poems of the Dispossessed.<br />

Dublin: The Dolmen Press, 1981.<br />

Leahy, Anna. “Is Women’s Poetry Passé?: A Call for Conversation.” Legacy Publications<br />

(2008): 311–23.<br />

Longley, Edna. “An ABC of Reading Contemporary Irish Poetry.” Princeton <strong>University</strong> Library<br />

Chronicle 59.3 (Spring 1998): 517–45.<br />

___. “From Cathleen to Anorexia: The Breakdown of Irelands.” Dublin: Attic Press LIP<br />

Pamphlet, 1990; reprinted in The Living Stream. Newcastle Upon Tyne: Bloodaxe, 1994.<br />

___. Poetry in the Wars. Newcastle Upon Tyne: Bloodaxe, 1986.<br />

Luddy, Maria, and Cliona Murphy. Women Surviving: Studies in Irish Women’s History in the<br />

19th and 20th Centuries. Swords, Co. Dublin: Pollbeg, 1989.<br />

Luftig, Victor. “A Migrant Mind in a Mobile Home: Salmon Publishing in the Ireland of the<br />

1990’s.” Eire-Ireland 26.1 (1989): 108–19.<br />

Lysaght, Patricia. The Banshee: The Irish Supernatural Death Messenger. Dublin: Glendale<br />

Press, 1986.<br />

MacCurtain, Margaret. “Godly Burden: The Catholic Sisterhoods in Twentieth-Century Ireland.”<br />

In Anthony Bradley and Maryann Gialanella Valiulis, eds. Gender and Sexuality in Modern<br />

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___. “Towards an Appraisal of the Religious Image of Women.” The Crane Bag 4.1 (1980): 26–<br />

30.<br />

MacCurtain, Margaret and Donncha O Corrain, eds. Women in Irish Society: The Historical<br />

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MacCurtain, Margaret and Mary O’Dowd, eds. Women in Early Modern Ireland. Edinburgh:<br />

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Mahony, Christina Hunt. “Poetry in Modern Ireland—Where Post-Colonial and Post-Modern<br />

Part Ways.” The Comparatist (Spring 1996): 89–92.<br />

___. Contemporary Irish Literature: Transforming Tradition. New York: St. Martin’s Press,<br />

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McDonald, Peter. Mistaken Identities: Poetry and Northern Ireland. Oxford: Clarendon Press,<br />

1997.<br />

___. “Yeats, Form and Northern Irish Poetry.” Yeats Annual 12 (1996): 13–42.<br />

McElroy, James. “Night Feed: An Overview of Ireland’s Women Poets.” American Poetry<br />

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___. “The Contemporary Fe/Male Poet: A Preliminary Reading.” In James D. Brophy and<br />

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McGuinness, Arthur. “Hearth and History: Poetry by Contemporary Irish Women.” In Michael<br />

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Meaney, Geraldine. “History Gasps: Myth in Contemporary Irish Women’s Poetry.” In Michael<br />

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Meaney, Geraldine. “Sex and Nation, Women in Irish Culture and Politics.” Dublin: Attic Press<br />

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Mhac an tSaoi, Maire. “The Female Principle in Gaelic Poetry.” In S.F. Gallagher, ed. Women in<br />

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Muldoon, Paul. “The Point of Poetry.” Princeton <strong>University</strong> Library Chronicle 59.3 (Spring<br />

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___. Women’s Rights in Ireland. Dublin: Ward River Press, 1983.<br />

Somerville-Arjat, Gillean and Rebecca E. Wilson, eds. Sleeping with Monsters: Conversations<br />

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