Poem

Radharc ar an Abhainn Nua

Title Radharc ar an Abhainn Nua
Author Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill

Instances of Publication

A published appearance of this poem.

Collection/Anthology Year of Publication Medium View Details
Cead Aighnis 1998 Print Collection View Details
Feis agus Cead Aighnis 2015 Print Collection View Details
Publication Instance Details #695
Collection/Anthology Details
Collection/Anthology Cead Aighnis
Date of Publication 1998
Publisher An Sagart (Ireland)
Page Number(s) 58
Publication Overview
Translation Is Multilingual Explicit Irish Context? Ekphrasis Has Paratext? Reference to News, Media or Technology
No
No
No
No
No
No
Details
Human Rights Issues
War / Genocide Referenced
Languages
Genre Short Lyric
Medium Print Collection
Notes The speaker of the poem reflects on the destruction of the 'real' America, and of the minoritization and commercialization of the Native American culture. This is expressed through a reference to a Daniel Day-Lewis film, 'The Last of the Mohicans', (1992). The landscape in the film, purporting to be the Hudson river, has in real life been taken over by housing estates and developments in the present day, so the speaker of the poem has to venture further to find the 'real' American landscape - the Blue Ridge Mountains in North Carolina. There, she reflects on the Native American peoples who once lived there. The destruction and colonization of the landscape reflects the fate of the Native peoples of America.
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