Irish Writers: Rage and Rapture
Center for Lifelong
Learning Irish Writers Instructor:
Mike Casey
Tuesday Afternoons, 2:15-3:45 in
October and November 2014
COURSE DESCRIPTION:
Why Irish Writers? Throughout most of the 20th century,
prominent Irish authors produced work that has become canonical in modern
literature.
We will organize the course around poetry
and story. Our approach to the material
will explore the ways in which Irish artists create powerful expressions of
rage and rapture. And we will focus on
how the energies of Irish voices frequently serve to frame abiding human
questions. For example, Yeats in his
early work gives form to what he called the “cry of the heart against
necessity”; Joyce in Dubliners decided “to write a chapter of the moral
history of my country and I chose Dublin because that city seemed to me the
centre of paralysis.” Joseph O’Connor will have us board a ship fleeing the
famine and wrestling with the mystery of a murder.
Readings will be completed in advance of our
meetings, and each weekly session will consist of brief background lecture when
needed and group discussion on a regular basis.
We’re glad you have joined us for this
inquiry. At the very least we will learn
that there is more to this Irish crowd of saints and sinners than St. Paddy’s
Day.
FACILITATOR: Michael Casey earned his B.A. and M.A.
degrees in English at Loyola University of Los Angeles, CA. He completed
doctoral work in literature in Illinois and Ireland. He has taught literature courses at the
secondary, college and adult education levels for over 40 years.
Calendar
of Readings
1st and 2nd Meetings
Introductory
Lecture, “A Wake for St. Patrick”
W.B.
Yeats: The Hierophant
Distribute
loan copies of Selected Poems and Four Plays of William Butler Yeats,
Fourth Edition; and Star of the Sea, a novel by Joseph O’Connor
Reading and
Class Discussion of Poems by Yeats . . .
"The
Lake Isle of Innisfree," pp. 12-13
"Down By The Salley Gardens,"
p.5
"When You Are Old," p. 14
"The Song of Wandering Aengus,"
p. 22
"The Wild Swans at Coole," pp.
51-52
"An Irish Airman Forsees His
Death," pp. 55-56
"September 1913," pp. 38-39
"Easter 1916," pp. 83-85
"Leda and the Swan," p.121
"A Prayer For My Daughter,"
pp.90-92
"The Second Coming," pp.89-90
"Sailing To Byzantium," pp.
102-103
"Among School Children,"
pp.121-23
"The Circus Animals' Desertion,"
pp.198-199
3rd Meeting
"The Lament For
Art O'Leary" by Eibhin Dubh O'Connell (handout)
“Lost Ground,” story by William Trevor
(handout)
“The O’Touney Sisters and the Day of
Reckoning” by Moy McCrory (handout)
“First
Confession” and “Guests of the Nation” by Frank O’Connor (handout)
4th Meeting
read at least these stories:
"The
Sisters"
"Araby"
"Eveline"
"The Dead"
5th Meeting
Star of the Sea by Joseph O’Connor
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