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Medbh McGuckianMedbh McGuckian
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BiographyMedbh McGuckian was born in Belfast on 12 August 1950 and educated at a Dominican convent and Queen's University, Belfast. She has worked as a teacher and an editor and is a former Writer in Residence at Queen's University, Belfast (1985-8).    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Non-fiction, Poetry     BibliographyPortrait of Joanna Ulsterman, 1980 Single Ladies: Sixteen Poems Interim Press, 1980 Trio Poetry 2 (with Damian Gorman and Douglas Marshall) Blackstaff Press, 1981 The Flower Master Oxford University Press, 1982 The Greenhouse Steane, 1983 Venus and the Rain Oxford University Press, 1984 The Big Striped Golfing Umbrella: Poems by Young People from Northern Ireland (ed) Arts Council of Northern Ireland, 1985 On Ballycastle Beach Oxford University Press, 1988 Two Women, Two Shores (with Nuala Archer) New Poets, 1989 Marconi's Cottage Gallery Books (Oldcastle, Co. Meath), 1991 Captain Lavender Gallery Books (Oldcastle, Co. Meath), 1994 Selected Poems: 1978-1994 Gallery Books (Oldcastle, Co. Meath), 1997 Shelmalier Gallery Books (Oldcastle, Co. Meath), 1998 Horsepower Pass By!: A Study of the Car in the Poetry of Seamus Heaney Cranagh Press (Coleraine), 1999 The Water Horse: Poems in Irish by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill with translations into English by Medbh McGuckian and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin Gallery Books (Oldcastle, Co. Meath), 1999 Drawing Ballerinas Gallery Books (Oldcastle, Co. Meath), 2001 The Face of the Earth Gallery Books (Oldcastle, Co. Meath), 2002 The Book of the Angel Gallery Books (Oldcastle, Co. Meath), 2004 The Currach Requires No Harbours Gallery Press, 2006 My Love Has fared Inland Gallery Press, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1979 National Poetry Competition ('The Flitting') 1980 Eric Gregory Award 1982 Ireland Arts Council Award The Flower Master 1982 Rooney Prize for Irish Literature The Flower Master 1983 Alice Hunt Bartlett Award The Flower Master 1989 The Cheltenham Prize On Ballycastle Beach 1992 Irish Times Irish Literature Prize for Poetry (shortlist) Marconi's Cottage 2002 Forward Poetry Prize (Best Single Poem) ('She is in the Past, She has this Grace')    
  Critical PerspectiveMedbh McGuckian's poetry establishes a rich inner world of feminine sensibility, characteristically conveyed in ornate language and complex, unpredictable imagery. The sensual and frequently erotic play of her verse relies on motifs of colour and nature, on dreams and the subconscious, and on a sequence of domestic spaces: beds; rooms; windows and houses. Her aesthetic vision is elusive, even surrealist, yet her convoluted metaphoric sequences are full of meaningful possibilities:
'She seems a garden escape in her unconscious
'My words are traps /
The resultant obscurity in much of McGuckian's work may irritate those seeking 'secure' readings of the verse, but appeals at the same time to those prepared to accommodate its indeterminacy. Her writing demands in her readers a radical adjustment of interpretative procedures, and necessitates a significant linguistic and semantic re-orientation.
McGuckian's 1982 collection, The Flower Master, established her as a poet of female experience through its negotiation of pregnancy, birth and motherhood. Dominated by flower imagery, these poems interrogate the processes of growth, bloom and decay, but in tones of uncertainty rather than celebration. Neither nature nor maternity seem stable. House, garden and female body coalesce as sites of incoherence and fragmentation, and domestic images suggest physical and emotional disturbance:
'My dishes on the draining-board
The pervasive sense of unease within the female space continues in McGuckian's follow-up collection, Venus and the Rain (1984). Here, the acknowledged satisfactions of motherhood are undercut by insecurities in sexual and emotional partnerships: 'Each lighted / window shows me cardiganed, more desolate / than the garden ...' ('On Not Being Your Lover'). The interior world is fraught with absences and weighted silences, and shot through with episodes of anxiety.
In On Ballycastle Beach (1988), the landscape of Ireland's North Antrim coast is the setting for McGuckian's study of the self as fluid and mutable. While still attached to 'the house' as its key space, these poems move outwards to images of clouds and tides; the 'athletic anatomy of waves, in their / Reflectiveness, rebirth ...' ('Sea or Sky?'). The female body remains connected to experiences of motherhood but opens again to wider natural impulses. The collection is also patterned by memories, of places, emotions and relationships, as though the poet seeks location in time and space:
'A town will never draw your mind to it
The same geographical landscape underpins Marconi's Cottage (1991), which McGuckian builds around the title image of the forefather of modern communication. This is an opportunity to consider, through Marconi, concepts of connection - the sources and synapses of artistic vision. The volume conveys a growth in self-confidence on the part of a poet now ready for mature reflection on the creative process: 'Threshing a poem / or a grape harvest / takes four equal limbs / and a horizontal cutting / that has always already begun.' ('The Snow Speaker').
Several critics of McGuckian's work have expressed the view that her interior, feminine aesthetic fails to register a public community, and lacks therefore the political engagement of her fellow Northern Irish poets. In her later collections however, a fragile poetic landscape is constantly contaminated by the disorder of the outside world. In Captain Lavender (1994), the poet's grief for her dead father merges with grief for a broken society at large. These poems take on darker nuances and signal towards national events. 'The Albert Chain', for example, foregrounds war, death, judgment, betrayal: its sinister images are of the terrorist and the butcher. 'The War Degree' evinces a similar political tension: 'heart-stained autumn drove / fierce half-bricks into the hedges; tree-muffled / streets vanished in the lack of news'. Private and domestic contexts cannot but be marked by public aggression and its consequences, as McGuckian emphasises in the volume's epigraph, taken from Picasso: 'I have not painted war ... but I have no doubt that the war is in these paintings I have done.'
Direct and oblique confrontations with an Irish political inheritance dominate her later work. In Shelmalier (1998), McGuckian deals with the failed rebellion of the United Irishmen in 1798, addressing an Irish cultural sensibility steeped in a militant ideological history: 'Before violence was actually offered / to us, we followed a trail of words' ('The Society of the Bomb'). Several poems also implicitly re-connect the spheres of female and male in the collaboration of imagery: sea and water merge with land and island in an organic - if problematic - system. The volume as a whole suggests an acceptance of the fact that public history and private sensibility can never be kept separate, in a broadening of political and civic vision which McGuckian consolidates in her more recent collection, The Face of the Earth (2002).
As a poet who relentlessly defamiliarises image and language, yet pursues the most traditional of poetic matter - emotion, sensibility and interiority - McGuckian is full of intriguing ambiguities. Embracing both personal and political spaces, her rich and surprising aesthetic continues to distinguish her among her Northern Irish contemporaries, her innovative poetic landscape demanding, at every stage, alternative means of critical engagement.
Eve Patten, 2003  
  Author statementWhy do I write? Out of the helplessness of the human condition - the only kind of control I can muster over the incoherence and apparent senselessness of it. Also to communicate and diagnose and express what cannot otherwise be expressed; to be a voice or give a voice to things that have been oppressed and repressed in my peculiar culture; to find an emotional valve for the deepest joys and sorrows.  
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