Richard Hugo on Skye: Tragicomic Poetry of the Self

Authors

  • Jiří Flajšar Palacký University Olomouc

Keywords:

Richard Hugo, American poetry, 20th century, travel, Scotland, Isle of Skye, confessional poetry, topography, place, landscape, tragicomedy

Abstract

The article examines a book of poems, The Right Madness on Skye (1980), by American poet Richard Hugo (1923–1982), a major representative of the confessional and landscape mode in postwar Anglophone literature. In this book, inspired by a sabbatical year spent on the Scottish island of Skye, Hugo explores themes of dispossession, home-seeking, and sympathy for the underprivileged, yet there is an element of humor in the Skye poems that his earlier work does not show. The blend of nostalgia, melancholy, and tragicomedy is what makes the topographical poetry of Hugo a memorable exercise in poetic appropriation of a remote region that shares, despite the considerable cultural and geographic differences, a great deal with his native country of the Pacific Northwest and his adopted home in the state of Montana.

References

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Published

2013-12-05

How to Cite

Flajšar, J. . (2013). Richard Hugo on Skye: Tragicomic Poetry of the Self. American & British Studies Annual, 6, 9–19. Retrieved from https://absa.upce.cz/index.php/absa/article/view/2218

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Articles