A Companion to Contemporary British and Irish Poetry, 1960 - 2015. Группа авторов

A Companion to Contemporary British and Irish Poetry, 1960 - 2015 - Группа авторов


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with their British counterparts at least with regard to the lack of complication in the situation. The Patrick Kavanagh Award, one of the most prestigious poetry prizes in Ireland, is simply confined to poets born in Ireland, or of Irish nationality, or long‐term residents of Ireland. It is awarded for a first unpublished collection and the winner receives €1000. The sole adjudicator is Brian Lynch, poet, novelist, and president of the society (the Patrick Kavanagh Society n.d.). Similarly, the Poetry Now Award is presented for the best single volume of poetry by an Irish poet.2 Two prestigious poetry prizes are awarded annually at the Mountains to Sea dlr Book Festival and are administered by Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown County Council—the Irish Times Poetry Now Award and the Shine/Strong Poetry Award. The latter is presented annually to the author of the best first collection of poems published by an Irish poet in the previous year. As Poetry Salzburg had published Jim Maguire's first collection Music Field in June 2013, the administrators were contacted so as to establish whether the poet's eligibility was somehow nullified by the possible ineligibility of his European publisher. It had not been specified in their Publishers Guidelines whether or not a publisher had to be operative in the Republic. The reply received the very next day confirmed that the sole condition was that the author had to be an Irish citizen or resident in Ireland for the past 5 years and that there was no need for the publisher to be operative in the Republic. Jim Maguire's collection was shortlisted and he was invited, together with four other shortlisted poets, to give a reading in the new Central Library and Cultural Centre in Dún Laoghaire. Although he did not win the award, it was, in his own words, “a thrill” for him to participate in such a prize reading.

      1 Arts Council England (2018). “Grants for the Arts Awards Made Between 01 January 2018–31 January 2018”. www.artscouncil.org.uk/grants‐arts‐0#section‐1 (accessed 19 August 2019).

      2 Astley, Neil (2018). “Getting Your Poetry Out There.” In: Writers' & Artists' Yearbook 2019 (ed. Joanne Harris), 362–367. London et al.: Bloomsbury.

      3 Bainbridge, Ashton (2016). “Forward Prizes for Poetry Shortlists Announced” (13 June). https://fmcm.co.uk/news/2016/6/13/forward‐prizes‐for‐poetry‐shortlists‐announced (accessed 9 August 2019).

      4 Bookworm (2002) “Poets Cornered”. Private Eye, No. 1059 (26 July – 8 August), 25.

      5 “British Poetry Awards” (2019). Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category: British_poetry_awards (accessed 19 August 2019).

      6 Burnside, John (2016). “‘… really interesting stuff happens on the borderlines’. Interview with Wolfgang Görtschacher and David Malcolm.” Poetry Salzburg Review 29: 7–18.

      7 Cambridge, Gerry (2016). ‘The Dark Horse’: The Making of a Little Magazine. Fife: HappenStance.

      8 Causley, Charles (1984). Email to R.G. Bishop (10 September).

      9 Chandler, Mark (2019). “High Returns and Slow Sales Hit Salt with £15,000 Shortfall”. The Bookseller (1 August)”. https://www.thebookseller.com/news/salt‐asks‐readers‐help‐after‐difficult‐years‐trading‐1048871 (accessed 20 August 2019).

      10 Clyde, Tom and Andreas, Schachermayr (1999). HU: An Author Index to Issues 100–107. Greyabbey: HU Publications.

      11 Connelly, Joey (2014). “The Glittering Prizes.” The Poetry Review 104 (2): 123–126.

      12  Constantine, David and Constantine, Helen (2016). “Introduction.” In: Centres of Cataclysm. Celebrating Fifty Years of Modern Poetry in Translation (eds. Sasha Dugdale, David Constantine and Helen Constantine), 20–21. Hexham: Bloodaxe.

      13 Cooke, David (2019). “Submissions”. The High Window. https://thehighwindowpress.com/submissions (accessed 20 August 2019).

      14 Cookson, William (1994). “Introduction.” In: Agenda: An Anthology: The First Four Decades 1959–1993, xiii–xxvi. Manchester: Carcanet Press.

      15 Costa Book Awards (2019). “FAQs: Costa Book Awards – How Do the Costa Book Awards Work?” www.costa.co.uk/faqs/#costa_book_awards (accessed 24 August 2019).

      16 Croft, Andy (2019a). Unpublished Interview with Wolfgang Görtschacher.

      17 Croft, Andy (2019b). “Stripped Naked by the Flames.” PN Review 45 (5): 31–33.

      18 Croft, Andy (2019c). Email to the author (28 August).

      19 Croft, Andy (2019d). Email to the author. (29 August).

      20 Digital Collections, University of Wisconsin‐Madison Libraries (2019). “Little Magazine Interview Index”. http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/LittleMagInt (accessed 20 August 2019).

      21 Drabble, Margaret (1989). “Pleasure and Prestige: A Writer Reflects on the Prize System.” In: British Book News, 250–251.

      22 Ellis, R.J., John Lucas, Stan Smith, and David Miller (2002). Little Magazines. The Nottingham Trent University.

      23 English, James F. (2005). The Economy of Prestige: Prizes, Awards, and the Circulation of Cultural Value. Cambridge, Mass; London: Harvard UP.

      24 Falci, Eric (2015). The Cambridge Introduction to British Poetry, 1945–2010. Cambridge: CUP.

      25 Ferguson, Donna (2019). “Poetry Sales Soar as Political Millennials Search for Clarity”. The Guardian (21 January). https://www.theguardian. com/books/2019/jan/21/poetry‐sales‐soar‐as‐political‐millennials‐search‐for‐clarity (accessed 24 August 2019).

      26 Finch, Peter (1996). “Poetry Matters.” In: The Writer's Handbook 1997 (ed. Barry Turner), 116–135. London: Macmillan.

      27 Finch, Peter (1997). “Poetry – All the Same Thing?” In: The Writer's Handbook 1998 (ed. Barry Turner), 107–129. London: Macmillan.

      28 Finch, Peter (2000). “Poetry as Ordinary Life.” In: The Writer's Handbook 2001 (ed. Barry Turner), 112–137. London: Macmillan.

      29 Flood, Alison (2009). “ACE in a Hole”. The Bookseller (20 August). https://www.thebookseller.com/feature/ace‐hole# (accessed 20 August 2019).

      30 Flood, Alison (2011). “Alice Oswald Withdraws from TS Eliot Prize in Protest at Sponsor Aurum”. The Guardian (6 December). https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/dec/06/alice‐oswald‐withdraws‐ts‐eliot‐prize


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