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(2018) Ted Hughes, nature and culture, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Imagination alters everything

Ted Hughes and place

Janne Stigen Drangsholt

pp. 125-139

This chapter investigates the significance of time and place in Hughes's poetic imagining of England and the English landscape, and examines whether it can be viewed as a form of gathering which not only extends into a past, re-collecting what Seamus Heaney, in his essay "Englands of the Mind", refers to as "communal ways' and confirming "an identity which is threatened", but also reaches into a future for which it collects and stores meaning. What is more, the paper also aims to examine this act of gathering as a vertical movement, which reaches into the deep that is also England, in the form of a place that is mythical, religious, and, as always for Hughes, acutely immanent.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-97574-0_8

Full citation:

Stigen Drangsholt, J. (2018)., Imagination alters everything: Ted Hughes and place, in N. Roberts, M. Wormald & T. Gifford (eds.), Ted Hughes, nature and culture, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 125-139.

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