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Ciaran Carson

Ciaran Gerard Carson (9 October 1948 – 6 October 2019) was a Northern Ireland-born poet and novelist.

Ciaran Carson
Born(1948-10-09)9 October 1948
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Died6 October 2019(2019-10-06) (aged 70)
Belfast, Northern Ireland
EducationSt. Mary's Christian Brothers' Grammar School, Belfast
Queen's University, Belfast
Notable awardsEric Gregory Award (1978)
Alice Hunt Bartlett Prize (1987)
T. S. Eliot Prize (1993)
Cholmondeley Award (2003)
Forward Poetry Prize (2003)

Early life and education edit

Ciaran Carson was born on 9 October 1948[citation needed] in Belfast into an Irish-speaking family. His father, William, was a postman and his mother, Mary, worked in the linen mills. He spent his early years in the lower Falls Road where he attended Slate Street School and then St. Gall's Primary School, both of which subsequently closed. He then attended St. Mary's Christian Brothers' Grammar School before proceeding to Queen's University, Belfast (QUB) to read for a degree in English.[1]

Career edit

After graduation, he worked for over twenty years as the Traditional Arts Officer of the Arts Council of Northern Ireland.[2]

In 1998 he was appointed a Professor of English at QUB where he established, and was the Director of the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry.[2]

He retired in 2016 but remained attached to the organisation on a part-time basis.[3]

Work edit

His collections of poetry include The Irish for No (1987), winner of the Alice Hunt Bartlett Prize; Belfast Confetti (1990), which won the Irish Times Irish Literature Prize for Poetry; and First Language: Poems (1993), winner of the T. S. Eliot Prize. His prose includes The Star Factory (1997) and Fishing for Amber (1999). His novel Shamrock Tea (2001), explores themes present in Jan van Eyck's painting The Arnolfini Marriage. His translation of Dante's Inferno was published in November 2002. Breaking News, (2003), won the Forward Poetry Prize (Best Poetry Collection of the Year) and a Cholmondeley Award.[2] His translation of Brian Merriman's The Midnight Court came out in 2006. For All We Know was published in 2008, and his Collected Poems were published in Ireland in 2008, and in North America in 2009.[4]

He was also an accomplished musician, and the author of Last Night's Fun: About Time, Food and Music (1996), a study of Irish traditional music.[2] He wrote a bi-monthly column on traditional Irish music for The Journal of Music. In 2007 his translation of the early Irish epic Táin Bó Cúailnge, called The Táin, was published by Penguin Classics.[5]

Two months before he died he published Claude Monet, "The Artist’s Garden at Vétheuil", 1880 in The New Yorker. Its last lines were:[6]

It’s beautiful weather, the 30th of March, and tomorrow the clocks go forward.
How strange it is to be lying here listening to whatever it is going on.
The days are getting longer now, however many of them I have left.
And the pencil I am writing this with, old as it is, will easily outlast their end.

Critical perspective edit

Carson managed an unusual marriage in his work between the Irish vernacular story-telling tradition and the witty elusive mock-pedantic scholarship of Paul Muldoon.[2] (Muldoon also combines both modes). In a trivial sense, what differentiates them is line length. As Carol Rumens pointed out 'Before the 1987 publication of The Irish for No, Carson was a quiet, solid worker in the groves of Heaney. But at that point he rebelled into language, set free by a rangy "long line" that was attributed variously to the influence of C. K. Williams, Louis MacNeice and traditional music'.

Carson's first book was The New Estate (1976).[7] In the ten years before The Irish for No (1987) he perfected a new style which effected a unique fusion of traditional story telling with postmodernist devices. The first poem in The Irish for No, the tour-de-force 'Dresden' parades his new technique. Free ranging allusion is the key. The poem begins in shabby bucolic:

'And as you entered in, a bell would tinkle in the empty shop, a musk
Of soap and turf and sweets would hit you from the gloom.'

It takes five pages to get to Dresden, the protagonist having joined the RAF as an escape from rural and then urban poverty. In Carson everything is rooted in the everyday, so the destruction of Dresden evokes memories of a particular Dresden shepherdess he had on the mantelpiece as a child and the destruction is described in terms of 'an avalanche of porcelain, sluicing and cascading'.

Like Muldoon's, Carson's work was intensely allusive. In much of his poetry he had a project of sociological scope: to evoke Belfast in encyclopaedic detail. Part Two of The Irish for No was called 'Belfast Confetti' and this idea expanded to become his next book. The Belfast of the Troubles is mapped with obsessive precision and the language of the Troubles is as powerful a presence as the Troubles themselves. The poem "Belfast Confetti" signals this:

'Suddenly as the riot squad moved in, it was raining exclamation marks,
Nuts, bolts, nails, car-keys. A fount of broken type...'

In First Language (1993), which won the T. S. Eliot Prize, language has become the subject. There are translations of Ovid, Rimbaud and Baudelaire. Carson was deeply influenced by Louis MacNeice and he included a poem called 'Bagpipe Music'. What it owes to the original is its rhythmic verve. With his love of dense long lines it is not surprising he was drawn to classical poetry and Baudelaire. In fact, the rhythm of 'Bagpipe Music' seems to be that of an Irish jig, on which subject he was an expert (his book about Irish music Last Night's Fun (1996) is regarded as a classic).[citation needed] To be precise, the rhythm is that of a "single jig" or "slide."):

'blah dithery dump a doodle scattery idle fortunoodle.'

Carson then entered a prolific phase in which the concern for language liberated him into a new creativity. Opera Etcetera (1996) had a set of poems on letters of the alphabet and another series on Latin tags such as 'Solvitur Ambulando' and 'Quod Erat Demonstrandum' and another series of translations form the Romanian poet Ștefan Augustin Doinaș. Translation became a key concern, The Alexandrine Plan (1998) featured sonnets by Baudelaire, Rimbaud and Mallarmé rendered into alexandrines. Carson's penchant for the long line found a perfect focus in the 12-syllable alexandrine line. He also published The Twelfth of Never (1999), sonnets on fanciful themes:

'This is the land of the green rose and the lion lily, /
Ruled by Zeno's eternal tortoises and hares, /
where everything is metaphor and simile'.

The Ballad of HMS Belfast (1999) collected his Belfast poems.

Awards edit

Death and legacy edit

Carson died of lung cancer on 6 October 2019 at the age of 70.[8][9]

In 2020, the Seamus Heaney Centre established two annual fellowships in memory of its first director, Ciaran Carson, and inspired by his writing about the city of Belfast in prose as well as poetry.[10]

Bibliography edit

Poetry edit

  • 1976: The New Estate, Blackstaff Press, Wake Forest University Press
  • 1987: The Irish for No, Gallery Press, Wake Forest University Press
  • 1988: The New Estate and Other Poems, Gallery Press
  • 1989: Belfast Confetti, Gallery Press, Wake Forest University Press
  • 1993: First Language: Poems, Gallery Books, Wake Forest University Press
  • 1996: Opera Et Cetera, Bloodaxe, Wake Forest University Press
  • 1998: The Alexandrine Plan (adaptations of sonnets by Baudelaire, Mallarmé, and Rimbaud), Gallery Press, Wake Forest University Press
  • 1999: The Ballad of HMS Belfast: A Compendium of Belfast Poems, Picador
  • 2001: The Twelfth of Never, Picador, Wake Forest University Press
  • 2003: Breaking News, Gallery Press, Wake Forest University Press, awarded the 2003 Forward Prize for Best Poetry Collection
  • 2008: For All We Know, Gallery Press; Wake Forest University Press, 2008
  • 2008: Collected Poems, Gallery Press; Wake Forest University Press, 2009
  • 2009: On the Night Watch, Gallery Press; Wake Forest University Press, 2010
  • 2010: Until Before After, Gallery Press, Wake Forest University Press
  • 2012: In the Light Of, Gallery Press; Wake Forest University Press, 2013
  • 2019: Still Life, Gallery Press; Wake Forest University Press, 2020

Prose edit

  • 1978: The Lost Explorer, Ulsterman Publications
  • 1986: Irish Traditional Music, Appletree Press
  • 1995: Belfast Frescoes, (with John Kindness) Ulster Museum
  • 1995: Letters from the Alphabet, Gallery Press
  • 1996: Last Night's Fun: About Time, Food and Music, a book about traditional music; Cape; North Point Press (New York), 1997 ISBN 0-86547-511-3
  • 1997: The Star Factory, a memoir of Belfast; Granta
  • 1999: Fishing for Amber, Granta
  • 2001: Shamrock Tea, a novel which was longlisted for the Booker Prize; Granta
  • 2009: The Pen Friend, a web of memory, published by Blackstaff Press
  • 2012: Exchange Place, a novel, published by Blackstaff Press

Translations edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Award winning Belfast poet Ciaran Carson passes away aged 70". Belfast Telegraph. 6 October 2019. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Tributes to late Belfast poet Ciaran Carson, who inspired so many with his 'inventive and roomy imagination'". Belfast Telegraph. 7 October 2019. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  3. ^ . www.qub.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 2 July 2017. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  4. ^ "Collected oems by Ciaran Carson". Wake Forest University Press. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  5. ^ Carson, Ciaran (2008). The Táin : a new translation of the Táin bó Cúailnge. Penguin. ISBN 9780140455304.
  6. ^ "Claude Monet, "The Artist's Garden at Vétheuil," 1880". The New Yorker. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  7. ^ "Ciaran Carson". Belfast Group. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  8. ^ Craig, Patricia (6 October 2019). "Ciaran Carson obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  9. ^ Genzlinger, Neil (9 October 2019). "Ciaran Carson, Versatile Belfast Poet, Is Dead at 70". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  10. ^ "Ciaran Carson Writing and the City Fellowships - Expression of Interest". Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry. 10 April 2019. Retrieved 17 June 2022.

External links edit

  • The Triumph in memory of Ciaran Carson by Paul Muldoon
  • Seamus Heaney Centre
  • Wake Forest University Press North American publisher of Carson
  • The Journal of Music, for which Ciaran Carson writes a bi-monthly column on traditional Irish music.
  • Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Books Library

ciaran, carson, ciaran, gerard, carson, october, 1948, october, 2019, northern, ireland, born, poet, novelist, born, 1948, october, 1948belfast, northern, irelanddied6, october, 2019, 2019, aged, belfast, northern, irelandeducationst, mary, christian, brothers. Ciaran Gerard Carson 9 October 1948 6 October 2019 was a Northern Ireland born poet and novelist Ciaran CarsonBorn 1948 10 09 9 October 1948Belfast Northern IrelandDied6 October 2019 2019 10 06 aged 70 Belfast Northern IrelandEducationSt Mary s Christian Brothers Grammar School BelfastQueen s University BelfastNotable awardsEric Gregory Award 1978 Alice Hunt Bartlett Prize 1987 T S Eliot Prize 1993 Cholmondeley Award 2003 Forward Poetry Prize 2003 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Work 4 Critical perspective 5 Awards 6 Death and legacy 7 Bibliography 7 1 Poetry 7 2 Prose 7 3 Translations 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education editCiaran Carson was born on 9 October 1948 citation needed in Belfast into an Irish speaking family His father William was a postman and his mother Mary worked in the linen mills He spent his early years in the lower Falls Road where he attended Slate Street School and then St Gall s Primary School both of which subsequently closed He then attended St Mary s Christian Brothers Grammar School before proceeding to Queen s University Belfast QUB to read for a degree in English 1 Career editAfter graduation he worked for over twenty years as the Traditional Arts Officer of the Arts Council of Northern Ireland 2 In 1998 he was appointed a Professor of English at QUB where he established and was the Director of the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry 2 He retired in 2016 but remained attached to the organisation on a part time basis 3 Work editHis collections of poetry include The Irish for No 1987 winner of the Alice Hunt Bartlett Prize Belfast Confetti 1990 which won the Irish Times Irish Literature Prize for Poetry and First Language Poems 1993 winner of the T S Eliot Prize His prose includes The Star Factory 1997 and Fishing for Amber 1999 His novel Shamrock Tea 2001 explores themes present in Jan van Eyck s painting The Arnolfini Marriage His translation of Dante s Inferno was published in November 2002 Breaking News 2003 won the Forward Poetry Prize Best Poetry Collection of the Year and a Cholmondeley Award 2 His translation of Brian Merriman s The Midnight Court came out in 2006 For All We Know was published in 2008 and his Collected Poems were published in Ireland in 2008 and in North America in 2009 4 He was also an accomplished musician and the author of Last Night s Fun About Time Food and Music 1996 a study of Irish traditional music 2 He wrote a bi monthly column on traditional Irish music for The Journal of Music In 2007 his translation of the early Irish epic Tain Bo Cuailnge called The Tain was published by Penguin Classics 5 Two months before he died he published Claude Monet The Artist s Garden at Vetheuil 1880 in The New Yorker Its last lines were 6 It s beautiful weather the 30th of March and tomorrow the clocks go forward How strange it is to be lying here listening to whatever it is going on The days are getting longer now however many of them I have left And the pencil I am writing this with old as it is will easily outlast their end Critical perspective editCarson managed an unusual marriage in his work between the Irish vernacular story telling tradition and the witty elusive mock pedantic scholarship of Paul Muldoon 2 Muldoon also combines both modes In a trivial sense what differentiates them is line length As Carol Rumens pointed out Before the 1987 publication of The Irish for No Carson was a quiet solid worker in the groves of Heaney But at that point he rebelled into language set free by a rangy long line that was attributed variously to the influence of C K Williams Louis MacNeice and traditional music Carson s first book was The New Estate 1976 7 In the ten years before The Irish for No 1987 he perfected a new style which effected a unique fusion of traditional story telling with postmodernist devices The first poem in The Irish for No the tour de force Dresden parades his new technique Free ranging allusion is the key The poem begins in shabby bucolic And as you entered in a bell would tinkle in the empty shop a musk Of soap and turf and sweets would hit you from the gloom It takes five pages to get to Dresden the protagonist having joined the RAF as an escape from rural and then urban poverty In Carson everything is rooted in the everyday so the destruction of Dresden evokes memories of a particular Dresden shepherdess he had on the mantelpiece as a child and the destruction is described in terms of an avalanche of porcelain sluicing and cascading Like Muldoon s Carson s work was intensely allusive In much of his poetry he had a project of sociological scope to evoke Belfast in encyclopaedic detail Part Two of The Irish for No was called Belfast Confetti and this idea expanded to become his next book The Belfast of the Troubles is mapped with obsessive precision and the language of the Troubles is as powerful a presence as the Troubles themselves The poem Belfast Confetti signals this Suddenly as the riot squad moved in it was raining exclamation marks Nuts bolts nails car keys A fount of broken type In First Language 1993 which won the T S Eliot Prize language has become the subject There are translations of Ovid Rimbaud and Baudelaire Carson was deeply influenced by Louis MacNeice and he included a poem called Bagpipe Music What it owes to the original is its rhythmic verve With his love of dense long lines it is not surprising he was drawn to classical poetry and Baudelaire In fact the rhythm of Bagpipe Music seems to be that of an Irish jig on which subject he was an expert his book about Irish music Last Night s Fun 1996 is regarded as a classic citation needed To be precise the rhythm is that of a single jig or slide blah dithery dump a doodle scattery idle fortunoodle Carson then entered a prolific phase in which the concern for language liberated him into a new creativity Opera Etcetera 1996 had a set of poems on letters of the alphabet and another series on Latin tags such as Solvitur Ambulando and Quod Erat Demonstrandum and another series of translations form the Romanian poet Ștefan Augustin Doinaș Translation became a key concern The Alexandrine Plan 1998 featured sonnets by Baudelaire Rimbaud and Mallarme rendered into alexandrines Carson s penchant for the long line found a perfect focus in the 12 syllable alexandrine line He also published The Twelfth of Never 1999 sonnets on fanciful themes This is the land of the green rose and the lion lily Ruled by Zeno s eternal tortoises and hares where everything is metaphor and simile The Ballad of HMS Belfast 1999 collected his Belfast poems Awards edit1978 Eric Gregory Award 1987 Alice Hunt Bartlett Prize for The Irish for No 1990 Irish Times Irish Literature Prize for Poetry for Belfast Confetti 1993 T S Eliot Prize for First Language Poems 1997 Yorkshire Post Book Award Book of the Year for The Star Factory 2003 Cholmondeley Award for Breaking News 2003 Forward Poetry Prize Best Poetry Collection of the Year for Breaking NewsDeath and legacy editCarson died of lung cancer on 6 October 2019 at the age of 70 8 9 In 2020 the Seamus Heaney Centre established two annual fellowships in memory of its first director Ciaran Carson and inspired by his writing about the city of Belfast in prose as well as poetry 10 Bibliography editPoetry edit 1976 The New Estate Blackstaff Press Wake Forest University Press 1987 The Irish for No Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 1988 The New Estate and Other Poems Gallery Press 1989 Belfast Confetti Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 1993 First Language Poems Gallery Books Wake Forest University Press 1996 Opera Et Cetera Bloodaxe Wake Forest University Press 1998 The Alexandrine Plan adaptations of sonnets by Baudelaire Mallarme and Rimbaud Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 1999 The Ballad of HMS Belfast A Compendium of Belfast Poems Picador 2001 The Twelfth of Never Picador Wake Forest University Press 2003 Breaking News Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press awarded the 2003 Forward Prize for Best Poetry Collection 2008 For All We Know Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 2008 2008 Collected Poems Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 2009 2009 On the Night Watch Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 2010 2010 Until Before After Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 2012 In the Light Of Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 2013 2019 Still Life Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 2020Prose edit 1978 The Lost Explorer Ulsterman Publications 1986 Irish Traditional Music Appletree Press 1995 Belfast Frescoes with John Kindness Ulster Museum 1995 Letters from the Alphabet Gallery Press 1996 Last Night s Fun About Time Food and Music a book about traditional music Cape North Point Press New York 1997 ISBN 0 86547 511 3 1997 The Star Factory a memoir of Belfast Granta 1999 Fishing for Amber Granta 2001 Shamrock Tea a novel which was longlisted for the Booker Prize Granta 2009 The Pen Friend a web of memory published by Blackstaff Press 2012 Exchange Place a novel published by Blackstaff PressTranslations edit 2002 The Inferno of Dante Alighieri translator Granta awarded the Oxford Weidenfeld Translation Prize 2005 The Midnight Court translation of Brian Merriman s Cuirt an Mhean Oiche Gallery Press Wake Forest University Press 2006 2007 The Tain Penguin Classics 2012 From Elsewhere translations of Jean Follain s poetry paired with original poem meditations on the same Gallery PressReferences edit Award winning Belfast poet Ciaran Carson passes away aged 70 Belfast Telegraph 6 October 2019 Retrieved 7 October 2019 a b c d e Tributes to late Belfast poet Ciaran Carson who inspired so many with his inventive and roomy imagination Belfast Telegraph 7 October 2019 Retrieved 7 October 2019 Professor Ciaran Carson Queen s University Belfast www qub ac uk Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Collected oems by Ciaran Carson Wake Forest University Press Retrieved 13 May 2020 Carson Ciaran 2008 The Tain a new translation of the Tain bo Cuailnge Penguin ISBN 9780140455304 Claude Monet The Artist s Garden at Vetheuil 1880 The New Yorker Retrieved 13 May 2020 Ciaran Carson Belfast Group Retrieved 7 October 2019 Craig Patricia 6 October 2019 Ciaran Carson obituary The Guardian Retrieved 7 October 2019 Genzlinger Neil 9 October 2019 Ciaran Carson Versatile Belfast Poet Is Dead at 70 The New York Times Retrieved 9 October 2019 Ciaran Carson Writing and the City Fellowships Expression of Interest Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry 10 April 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2022 External links editThe Triumph in memory of Ciaran Carson by Paul Muldoon Seamus Heaney Centre Wake Forest University Press North American publisher of Carson The Journal of Music for which Ciaran Carson writes a bi monthly column on traditional Irish music Stuart A Rose Manuscript Archives and Rare Books Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ciaran Carson amp oldid 1185528222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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