Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of Bereavement

In the 1930s, the lingering absence of God and of a stable reality engulfed the work of the poet Hugh MacDiarmid, leader of the Scottish Renaissance Movement. To counter this void, like many others at the time, MacDiarmid found refuge in communism and nationalism and started to write political and i...

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Main Author: Béatrice DUCHATEAU
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2016-06-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/erea/5158
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spelling doaj-1504c4856b2044a7ba2e6c4cee567d982020-11-25T02:46:51ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182016-06-011310.4000/erea.5158Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of BereavementBéatrice DUCHATEAUIn the 1930s, the lingering absence of God and of a stable reality engulfed the work of the poet Hugh MacDiarmid, leader of the Scottish Renaissance Movement. To counter this void, like many others at the time, MacDiarmid found refuge in communism and nationalism and started to write political and idealist poetry. In his poems, his political idealism comes into being in the association of reality and ideal, symbolised first by Jean and Sophia, the characters of A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle (1926), and duplicated later in the fantasised image of Lenin, perfect blending of idea and action. Rejecting Sartre’s denial of the political effect poetry can have, the violence of MacDiarmid’s work desperately attempts to have reality submit to its aura. The shrill imperative and nominal forms of the poems borrow their power of persuasion from advertisement slogans while the poetic margins endeavour to mimic performative oracles. In the violence of the poetry and in Hugh MacDiarmid’s extreme political commitment, one can recognise the refusal to mourn the very concept of reality in a world born out of shrapnel seeds.http://journals.openedition.org/erea/5158Hugh MacDiarmidcommitmentpoetryrealityidealviolence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Béatrice DUCHATEAU
spellingShingle Béatrice DUCHATEAU
Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of Bereavement
E-REA
Hugh MacDiarmid
commitment
poetry
reality
ideal
violence
author_facet Béatrice DUCHATEAU
author_sort Béatrice DUCHATEAU
title Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of Bereavement
title_short Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of Bereavement
title_full Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of Bereavement
title_fullStr Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of Bereavement
title_full_unstemmed Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetics of Commitment: the Modern Stigmata of Bereavement
title_sort hugh macdiarmid’s poetics of commitment: the modern stigmata of bereavement
publisher Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)
series E-REA
issn 1638-1718
publishDate 2016-06-01
description In the 1930s, the lingering absence of God and of a stable reality engulfed the work of the poet Hugh MacDiarmid, leader of the Scottish Renaissance Movement. To counter this void, like many others at the time, MacDiarmid found refuge in communism and nationalism and started to write political and idealist poetry. In his poems, his political idealism comes into being in the association of reality and ideal, symbolised first by Jean and Sophia, the characters of A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle (1926), and duplicated later in the fantasised image of Lenin, perfect blending of idea and action. Rejecting Sartre’s denial of the political effect poetry can have, the violence of MacDiarmid’s work desperately attempts to have reality submit to its aura. The shrill imperative and nominal forms of the poems borrow their power of persuasion from advertisement slogans while the poetic margins endeavour to mimic performative oracles. In the violence of the poetry and in Hugh MacDiarmid’s extreme political commitment, one can recognise the refusal to mourn the very concept of reality in a world born out of shrapnel seeds.
topic Hugh MacDiarmid
commitment
poetry
reality
ideal
violence
url http://journals.openedition.org/erea/5158
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