Archetypal, Identical, Similar? Seamus Heaney’s “Punishment” Revisited

Authors

  • Miguel Montezanti Universidad Nacional de La Plata

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37389/abei.v10i0.3672

Keywords:

Seamus Heaney, archetype, repetition, rite

Abstract

“Punishment” by Seamus Heaney reflects upon the relationship between a prehistoric girl killed in a ritual and two modern Irish girls punished as a consequence of political strife. My point is that Heaney’s poem cannot be
taken as a one-sided approach to identity, to stereotypes or archetypes. The
introduction of a Christian hypotext works in such a way that no element in any of the sequences can be taken as a univocal “archetype” of the other two. Notions such as “archetype”, “repetition” and “rite” are critically discussed. The poet interrogates the painful reality of Irish contemporary events and his own reactions, rather than acquiescing to a conclusive pattern of revenge.

Author Biography

  • Miguel Montezanti, Universidad Nacional de La Plata

    MONTEZANTI, MIGUEL ANGEL is Professor at the Universidad Nacional de La Plata, where he teaches English Literature and Literary Translation. He is also Vicedirector
    of the Centro de Literaturas y Literaturas Comparadas. Some of his publications are El nudo Coronado. Estudio de Cuatro Cuartetos, a research and translation of T.S.
    Eliot’s Four Quartets; Extraño encuentro: la poesía de Wilfred Owen and Visitas hospitalarias. La poesía de Philip Larkin, the last two as collaborative works. His translation of Shakespeare’s Sonnets has got an award from the Fondo Nacional de las Artes. He has also published Baladas inglesas y escocesas, and Shakespeare’s The Phoenix and the Turtle, both translations accompanied by preliminary studies.

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Published

2008-06-17

Issue

Section

Comparative Studies

How to Cite

Montezanti, M. (2008). Archetypal, Identical, Similar? Seamus Heaney’s “Punishment” Revisited. ABEI Journal, 10, 55-66. https://doi.org/10.37389/abei.v10i0.3672