ABSTRACT

The book offers the first comprehensive study of Paul Muldoon’s mourning verse. Considering not only the celebrated elegies like "Yarrow," "Incantata" or "Sillyhow Stride" but also the elegiac impulse as it develops throughout Muldoon’s entire work, All Will Be Swept Away charts a large swathe of Muldoon’s poetic landscape in order to show the complexity with which he approaches the themes of death and mourning. Using archival material as well as a vast array of theoretical apparatuses, the book unveils the psychological, literary and political undertones in his poetry, all the while attending to the operations of the poetic text: its form, its music and its capacity to console, warn and censure.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|38 pages

Shared worlds, shared voices

The work of empathy in elegies for family and friends

chapter 2|15 pages

Vision and revision

Paternal elegies

chapter 4|34 pages

Mourning bare life

Transnational elegies

chapter 5|18 pages

Tradition of defiance

Lamentations

chapter 6|23 pages

Between speech and silence

War elegies