Colonial Consequences contains sixteen essays in Irish literature and
culture by Belfast-born, Vancouver-based critic John Wilson Foster. The
essays survey texts, genres and cultural backgrounds, from
eighteenth-century landscape verse, the origins of Irish modernism, Yeats's
great poem 'Easter 1916', to the literature and life-styles of Northern
Ireland. They give eloquent, close readings of specific writers - Kavanagh,
Hewitt, Rodgers, Montague, Murphy, Donoghue - and at the heart of the book
Foster expands on his 1974 study of Seamus Heaney with a new and
challenging analysis of the poet as a deeply political writer, working
through cultural traditions that are questioned, while respected. The
volume concludes with recent essays which have made Foster an important
figure in the current debate over political meanings and cultural trends in
a riven, unsettled society.
An unusual, personal introduction by the author retraces the steps that led
him to these combative and penetrating inquiries. Scholarly, engaged and
readably written, locally rooted yet globally perceived, they provide a
rich matrix of interpretation which frames the past while clarifying the
future.
THE AUTHOR
John Wilson Foster, born in 1944, is Professor of English at the University
of British Colombia, Canada. He has written two seminal, critically
acclaimed works - Forces and Themes in Ulster Fiction (1974) and Fictions
of the Irish Literary Revival (1987) and is editor of Nature in Ireland: A
Scientific and Cultural History (1997).