Seamus Heaney: Afterlives

勛圖厙 Irish Studies hosts scholars and the public for a celebration of the poet and Nobel Laureate's life and work

The Boston College Irish Studies Program will celebrate the life and work of Nobel-winning poet Seamus Heaney (1939-2013)one of Irelands most accomplished and compelling writersfrom November 16-18 with Seamus Heaney: Afterlives, a conference that will include appearances by Heaneys wife, Marie; his daughter and literary executor, Catherine; his biographer, Fintan OToole; and numerous scholars from 勛圖厙 and elsewhere who will speak to Heaneys legacy as critic, public intellectual, and major moral aesthetic force of 20th- and early 21st-century Ireland.

Afterlives will explore new understandings of the poet since his death 10 years ago, with particular reference to living poets who continue to be influenced by Heaneys legacy. Uncovering fresh and surprising angles on Heaneys work, this conference will assert his enduring relevance to the aesthetic, political, and ethical questions we face in todays troubled world, according to organizers.

Seamus Heaney at a turf bog in Bellaghy with his fathers coat, hat, and walking stick, 1986

Seamus Heaney at a turf bog in Bellaghy with his fathers coat, hat, and walking stick, 1986; from the Bobbie Hanvey Photographic Archives at 勛圖厙's Burns Library.

Kicking off the conference on Thursday, November 16, OToole will give a talk on Political Heaney in Gasson 100 at 7 p.m., presented in cooperation with the Lowell Humanities Series.

The following day will be highlighted by two afternoon invitation-only discussions: The Craft: An Introduction for Students, chaired by Burns Library Visiting Scholar in Irish Studies Claire Connolly and including 勛圖厙 English faculty Allison Adair, Suzanne Matson, and Andrew Sofer; and The Critics: A Roundtable on Heaneys Influence, chaired by Margaret Kelleher, professor and chair of Anglo-Irish literature and drama at University College Dublin and a former Burns Scholar.

An invitation-only gala reception honoring Marie Heaney and featuring remarks by Catherine Heaney and an interview with OToole will conclude the day.

A full slate of public events will be on tap Saturday, November 18, with four keynotes, each including a Q&A session: Seamus Heaneys Desks, with Geraldine Higgins of Emory University; Diving for Crucibles: Seamus Heaney, Barrie Cooke, and Bog Poems, with Heather Clark of Huddersfield University; Silence-Breaking Rather Than Rabble-Rousing? Remembering to Forget the Croppies, with Sullivan Chair in Irish Studies Guy Beiner, director of 勛圖厙s Center for Irish Programs; and Seamus Heaneys Audio Archive, with Alex Alonso of Huddersfield University.

The conference finale will include Heaney and the Troubles, a selection of readings from Heaneys poetry, and The Green and the Blue, a performance by the Kabosh Theatre Company of Belfast of Laurence McKeowns play about those who patrolled the Irish-Northern Irish border during The Troubles. A closing reception in Burns Library will follow, with a presentation of the Heaney Archives by Burns Librarian Christian Dupont.

Afterlives is sponsored by the Institute for the Liberal Arts, the Consulate General of Ireland in Boston, Burns Library, and the Irish Studies Program.

Find more information, including speaker biographies,here.