Seamus Heaney, A Sense of Ireland

From the collection of

Northern Ireland Screen's Digital Film Archive
Launched in 2000, Northern Ireland Screen’s Digital Film Archive spans from 1897 to the present day and currently contains an ever-expanding catalogue of 13,000 items. It comprises material from a variety of depositors including feature films, sport, documentaries, animation, amateur footage, light entertainment, and a significant proportion of broadcast material from the UTV Archive.

Seamus Heaney, A Sense of Ireland


Seamus Heaney on how writers help give a nation its sense of self

A Sense of Ireland was a major festival of Irish culture held in London in 1980. Amongst those appearing in its inaugural year was the poet Seamus Heaney. He recites his translation of the traditional poem 'Sweeney Praises The Trees'. Interviewed by Gloria Hunniford he considers the role of the writer in shaping national identity and ponders how the English public will respond to this exhibition of Irish culture.

This material is courtesy of the UTV archive. Seamus Heaney is widely recognised as one of the foremost poets of the twentieth century. In 1995 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.


Tags

From the collection

Poetry: Language & Landscape

Exploring poetry's connections to community and culture...

Many of us first encounter poetry at school, and sometimes it’s hard to shake the association with rigid analysis, rote learning and awkward recital in front of class. However, like all of literature and art at large, poetry is human experience turned into creative expression – a vital record of who we are, how we live, and what makes us tick.

This curated collection explores poetry’s relationship with language and landscape. These poets draw inspiration from their surroundings, from the contours of the country to their local communities and cultures, and use the form of poetry and performance to bend, twist and enliven the languages that we hear around us every day.

Here you will find programmes delving into the environments that have inspired poets from Liverpool to the Lake District and beyond, as well as performances that showcase a diverse range of spoken language and dialects from across the UK. Far from a stuffy institution, poetry endures and thrives thanks to a mixture of tradition and innovation, with vibrant work that is by turns playful, poignant, personal and political.


23 videos in this collection

1

Brian Patten

A passionate poem about language and cultural identity from Scots poet Len Pennie
2

I’m No Havin Children

3

Linton Kwesi Johnson / John Cooper Clarke (Late Night from Two)

4

Benjamin Zephaniah, James Berry and Buchi Emecheta at Words to Life (Here and Now)

Seamus Heaney on how writers help give a nation its sense of self
5

Seamus Heaney, A Sense of Ireland

Five poetic responses to war, from Michael Redgrave's reading of Henry V to a musical rendition of a 1950s folk classic.
6

War Poetry

7

Hartlepool

8

Spirit of the Place: Swansea

9

The Liverpool Poets

10

I Is a long-memoried Woman Based on a Collection of Poems by Grace Nichols

11

Subterranean Poetry

12

Writers' Rambles: Torquay

13

The Ken Fine Show [05/03/95]

14

A Toast Tae The Daft Days- a poyum by Len Pennie for LIDL

15

The Dales Diary [23/08/2007]

16

J'accuse Philip Larkin

17

The Never-ending Poem - Children of the Black Triangle

18

Celebration (John Cooper Clarke)

19

The Armagh Rhymers Performance

20

F.T. Prince - Poems

21

Nesta Wyn Jones

22

R.S.Thomas

23

Gwilym R. Jones

View full collection