Poem
Red Trial
Title | Red Trial |
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Author | Medbh McGuckian |
Instances of Publication
A published appearance of this poem.
Collection/Anthology | Year of Publication | Medium | View Details |
---|---|---|---|
Human Rights Have No Borders: Voices of Irish Poets | 1998 | View Details |
Publication Instance Details #1113
Collection/Anthology Details
Collection/Anthology | Human Rights Have No Borders: Voices of Irish Poets |
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Date of Publication | 1998 |
Publisher | Marino Books (Ireland) |
Page Number(s) | 110-111 |
Publication Overview
Translation | Is Multilingual | Explicit Irish Context? | Ekphrasis | Has Paratext? | Reference to News, Media or Technology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
No |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
Yes |
Details
Human Rights Issues | |
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Irish Context | |
Languages | |
Genre | Short Lyric |
Medium | |
Paratext Text | An explanatory note accompanies each poem in the anthology 'Human Rights Have No Borders'. The explanatory note to 'Red Trial' reads as follows: The original subject of this piece was to register my acute sense of shock on discovering that one of the prisoners in my poetry session at Long Kesh was undergoing four life-sentences but was in fact innocent. Ten years of his life cannot be returned to him, and he is one of many, even though their release may come soon. I send it also on behalf of Róisín McAliskey, who was detained uncharged while her child was born under penal circumstances no less unjust than Anne Devlin's in 1803. Like her, she will bear the scars always. For those on death row, mostly blacks and some women, under federal law in several American states, where execution is a Damoclean sword. I hoped the chemical mix of the poem might hold a lot of ambivalent moral questions and responses in its solution. |
Notes | The poet's explanatory note indicates that this poem was initially written as a response to a miscarriage of justice in Northern Ireland, although it has international resonances. There is an explicit reference to false imprisonment 'a long detention on mere suspicion' and to the right to a fair trial. State abuse of power is alluded to in the poem. |
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