Monday, March 18, 2019
Identity in the Works of Eavan Boland and Seamus Heaney Essay -- Lava
Identity in the  whole works of Eavan Boland and Seamus HeaneyM either times  meter is reflective of the authors past as well as their personal  throw togethers. One struggle that poets write about is of identity and the creation, as well as loss, of individual identities. Using a  line of achievement from the  try on Lava Cameo by Eavan Boland, I will show how two poets use their  dodge to describe their struggle with identity. Eavan Boland and Seamus Heaney both write poems which express an  essential struggle with roles of identity and how they recreate their roles to fit their needs. Through  remembrance and reflection, both poets  summate to realize that the roles they led as well as those they reinvented have created their  confess personal identities. Boland, in her essay Lava Cameo, touches on several emotions (loss, despair, etc) and episodes in her  vitality which capture the essence of her identity. It is this notion of individual identity that is a  fundamental theme thro   ughout Bolands essay and some of her poems. Boland, through retrospection and hindsight, has been able to recognize the roles that society has dictated that she follow. These roles were not necessarily created for any rational reason (ex female role as subordinate and  raze as marital property). One passage in particular captures the internal struggles Boland has endured. This passage runs from pages 27 to 29 in Bolands Object Lessons. It begins by saying, It may not be that women poets of another generation and ends with but because of poetry. The passage begins by discussing how Boland may be experiencing some unease that female poets  to begin with her time may not have experienced nor have  in time considered for a fleeting moment. Boland claims that she had stumbled upon a realization, one tha...  ...s the possibility of reinvention of those roles for self betterment.  both(prenominal) Boland and Heaney show internal struggles with identity, particularly in feeling like a  acco   mplice and then reinventing themselves into the role of a leader. Although Heaney chose to be a follower whereas Boland felt she was forced to be, their struggles are similar as are their resolutions. Works CitedBoland, Eavan. Object Lessons the life of the woman and the poet of our time. Lava Cameo.  bracing York, NY W.W. Norton & Company, 1995. 3-34. Boland, Eavan. An Origin Like Water. An Irish Child in England 1951. New York, NY  W.W. Norton & Company, 1996. 190-191. Boland, Eavan. An Origin Like Water. Fond Memory. New York, NY W.W. Norton & Company, 1996. 192. Heaney, Seamus. Opened Ground, Selected Poems 1966-1996. Follower. New York, NY  Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998. 10.                   
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