Bilocation - Dislocation - Xlocation : The Apocalypse of Place in Eamonn Wall’s Poetry

Contemporary Irish-American poet Eamonn Wall, commuting between continents, has experienced a new form of exile, made of impermanence and mutation. His poetry, which shows this new relation to places, has had to find a language capable of expressing the continuous transformations of landscape as his...

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Main Author: Pascale Guibert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2020-05-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/8214
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author Pascale Guibert
author_facet Pascale Guibert
author_sort Pascale Guibert
collection DOAJ
description Contemporary Irish-American poet Eamonn Wall, commuting between continents, has experienced a new form of exile, made of impermanence and mutation. His poetry, which shows this new relation to places, has had to find a language capable of expressing the continuous transformations of landscape as his multiple journeys have led him to apprehend it: no longer stable and delimited. One of Russian émigré Mark Rothko’s band paintings revealed to the poet the motion language he was looking for to express his New Irish experience of places that run into each other. Beyond the static and stating possibilities of communicational grammar, Wall’s poetics undoes the fixity of places, blasts their monumentality and initiates a new way of apprehending the places of the world: in relation to each other. His innovative poetry thereby taps and continues the great Romantic tradition of Wordsworthian “Nature” writing. Both François Jullien and Édouard Glissant will be convoked to read this poetics of transition and relation.
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spelling doaj-art-8c42f423c19042ba9ec2ce502bdfa2642025-01-30T13:47:05ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022020-05-012710.4000/sillagescritiques.8214Bilocation - Dislocation - Xlocation : The Apocalypse of Place in Eamonn Wall’s PoetryPascale GuibertContemporary Irish-American poet Eamonn Wall, commuting between continents, has experienced a new form of exile, made of impermanence and mutation. His poetry, which shows this new relation to places, has had to find a language capable of expressing the continuous transformations of landscape as his multiple journeys have led him to apprehend it: no longer stable and delimited. One of Russian émigré Mark Rothko’s band paintings revealed to the poet the motion language he was looking for to express his New Irish experience of places that run into each other. Beyond the static and stating possibilities of communicational grammar, Wall’s poetics undoes the fixity of places, blasts their monumentality and initiates a new way of apprehending the places of the world: in relation to each other. His innovative poetry thereby taps and continues the great Romantic tradition of Wordsworthian “Nature” writing. Both François Jullien and Édouard Glissant will be convoked to read this poetics of transition and relation.https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/8214poeticsplacelandscapeexilemigrationstwenty-first century
spellingShingle Pascale Guibert
Bilocation - Dislocation - Xlocation : The Apocalypse of Place in Eamonn Wall’s Poetry
Sillages Critiques
poetics
place
landscape
exile
migrations
twenty-first century
title Bilocation - Dislocation - Xlocation : The Apocalypse of Place in Eamonn Wall’s Poetry
title_full Bilocation - Dislocation - Xlocation : The Apocalypse of Place in Eamonn Wall’s Poetry
title_fullStr Bilocation - Dislocation - Xlocation : The Apocalypse of Place in Eamonn Wall’s Poetry
title_full_unstemmed Bilocation - Dislocation - Xlocation : The Apocalypse of Place in Eamonn Wall’s Poetry
title_short Bilocation - Dislocation - Xlocation : The Apocalypse of Place in Eamonn Wall’s Poetry
title_sort bilocation dislocation xlocation the apocalypse of place in eamonn wall s poetry
topic poetics
place
landscape
exile
migrations
twenty-first century
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/8214
work_keys_str_mv AT pascaleguibert bilocationdislocationxlocationtheapocalypseofplaceineamonnwallspoetry