Poem
Autumn Journal
| Title | Autumn Journal | 
|---|---|
| Author | Louis MacNeice | 
Instances of Publication
A published appearance of this poem.
| Collection/Anthology | Year of Publication | Medium | View Details | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Louis MacNeice: Collected Poems | 2007 | Print Collection | View Details | 
Publication Instance Details #3003
Collection/Anthology Details
| Collection/Anthology | Louis MacNeice: Collected Poems | 
|---|---|
| Date of Publication | 2007 | 
| Publisher | Faber and Faber (UK) | 
| Page Number(s) | 99-164 | 
Publication Overview
| Translation | Is Multilingual | Explicit Irish Context? | Ekphrasis | Has Paratext? | Reference to News, Media or Technology | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No   | 
                        No  | 
                        
                        Yes  | 
                        No  | 
                        No  | 
                        
                        Yes  | 
                    
Details
| Human Rights Issues | |
|---|---|
| War / Genocide Referenced | |
| Irish Context | |
| Languages | |
| Genre | Long (narrative) Poem | 
| Medium | Print Collection | 
| Notes | This book-length poem is deeply attentive to the contemporary moment and to the imminence of WW2. The numerous references in the poem include: In canto V: Hitler; the Slovak politician and journalist, Milan Hodža; Konrad Ernst Eduard Henlein, a leading Sudeten German politician in Czechoslovakia; The Maginot Line, a line of concrete fortifications built by France in the 1930s to deter invasion by Germany. In canto VI: The Spanish Civil War. In canto VII: Hitler; Prague and Belgium. In canto VIII: blackout practice; The Munich Agreement; the invasion of Czechoslovakia. In canto X: Flanders. In canto XV: Gallipoli; Flanders; Roger Casement; Maud Gonne; Irish Independence and the Northern Irish Troubles. In canto XVIII: poverty and concentration camps. | 
                    
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