@article{46f6be4d60bc434d94d6d406209686a0,
title = "Reimagining the archive: Where did women's poetry go in Ireland",
abstract = "When exploring the relationship between her Irish ancestry and her creativity, Roxanne learned that women{\textquoteright}s poetry in Ireland was largely obliterated from the literary canon and missing from the archives. Early Irish poetry was often anonymous, and scholars presumed this indicated male authorship even when written with a female persona. However, while women{\textquoteright}s poetry may have, as Mary N. Harris says, gone {\textquoteleft}unnoticed and unpublished,{\textquoteright} the lack of archival evidence does not indicate that women were not composing poetry and an increasing body of academic research supports this argument. The mythological collection makes significant references to female poets, and oral poetry such as the lullaby and the lament commonly went unrecorded. Irish poets, including Eavan Boland and Nuala N{\'i} Dhomhnaill, demonstrate that contemporary poetry can bridge the gap where female poets were actively written out of history to a new understanding of the importance of their contribution. ",
keywords = "Creative writing, Irish poetry, Irish literature, Creativity, women's writing",
author = "Roxanne Bodsworth",
note = "A great deal of poetry and other creative writing uses diverse archival material, including the literary, historical and the biographical. Yet the relationship of creative writers—and creative artists more generally—to existing archives has often been uncomfortable and has posed significant questions for the writers, historians and archivists involved. This issue brings numerous research and creative perspectives to bear on these relationships, including the perspectives of writers who have found the archives richly populated with material relevant to their projects, and writers who have found very little archival material at all connecting to their creative work. In every case, these writers have addressed archival material in particular ways, shaping it for their own creative and often political purposes. Edited by Paul Hetherington",
year = "2022",
month = dec,
doi = "10.54375/001/9a02xe0xll",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "1--13",
journal = "Axon: Creative Explorations",
issn = "1838-8973",
publisher = "Faculty of Arts and Design, University of Canberra",
number = "2",
}