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         Muldoon Paul:     more books (100)
  1. The Best American Poetry 2005: Series Editor David Lehman
  2. The Prince of the Quotidian by Paul Muldoon, 1994-06
  3. Articulations: Poetry, Philosophy and the Shaping of Culture by Jane Conroy, Seamus Heaney, et all 2008-03-14
  4. The Birds (Gallery books) by Paul Muldoon, 1999-06-30
  5. Bandanna: An Opera in Two Acts and a Prologue (Faber poetry) by Daron Hagen, Paul Muldoon, 1999-04
  6. The End of the Poem: All Souls' Night by W.B. Yeats : An Inaugural Lecture Delivered Before the University of Oxford on 2 November 1999 (Inaugural Lectures (University of Oxford)) by Paul Muldoon, 2000-06
  7. Shining Brow by Daron Hagen, Paul Muldoon, 1993-02
  8. Cross Border Litigation: Environmental Rights in the Great Lakes Ecosystem by Paul R. Muldoon, 1986-06
  9. Kerry Slides by Paul Muldoon, 1998-01-01
  10. Scrake of Dawn: Poems by Young People from Northern Ireland
  11. Lord Byron (Poet to Poet) by Lord George Gordon Byron, 2007-04-05
  12. The Last Thesaurus by Paul Muldoon, 1996-10-07
  13. Evolution of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (Dave Dempsey Environmental) by Lee Botts, Paul R. Muldoon, 2005-11-30
  14. Irish Fairy and Folk Tales (Modern Library Classics)

61. Jacket 20 - John Kerrigan: Paul Muldoon’s Transits
paul muldoon’s Transits Photo of paul muldoon by Norman McBeath CourtestyFrances Sjoberg Assistant Director University of Arizona Poetry Center.
http://jacketmagazine.com/20/kerr-muld.html
Homepage Catalog
John Kerrigan
Muddling through after Madoc This piece is 10,200 words or about twenty printed pages long.
Endnotes are given at the end of this file. Click on the note to be taken to it; likewise to return to the text.
The Prince of the Quotidian , Paul Muldoon grumbles:
In the latest issue
of the TLS
this term serves mostly to belittle
the likes of Brodsky or Padilla
and is not appropriate of me; certainly not
is free to buy a ticket to his emerald isle
[Note 1]

TLS [Note 2] [Note 3] For Irish writers of this period, expatriation had special attractions. In Paris, Trieste, or the cosmopolitan circuits of diplomacy (to think of Denis Devlin), they could escape the dependency of West Britonism and the claustrophobia of cultural nationalism. Yet being elsewhere was so compatible with Irishness that it could also serve to confirm it. From the Flight of the Earls in 1607, through the continental exile of the eighteenth-century catholic gentry, and the emigration of the peasantry after the Famine, the experience and idea of leaving Ireland had been integral to being Irish. Photo of Paul Muldoon by Norman McBeath Courtesty Frances Sjoberg Assistant Director University of Arizona Poetry Center Most poets would relish being mentioned in the TLS The Prince [Note 4] while (it may be) signalling an awareness of sectarianism

62. Princeton - News - Paul Muldoon Wins Irish Times Literature Prize For Poetry
paul muldoon Wins Irish Times Literature Prize for Poetry. PRINCETON,NJ, October 1 paul muldoon, director of the Creative Writing
http://www.princeton.edu/pr/news/97/q4/1001-muldoon.html
News from
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Office of Communications, Stanhope Hall
Princeton, New Jersey 08544
Tel 609/258-3601; Fax 609/258-1301
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Justin Harmon 609/258-5732
Date: October 1, 1997
Paul Muldoon Wins Irish Times Literature Prize for Poetry
PRINCETON, N.J., October 1 Paul Muldoon, director of the Creative Writing Program at Princeton University, has won the 1997 Irish Literature Prize for Poetry sponsored by The Irish Times , the Dublin-based newspaper announced today.
Muldoon won for his 1996 volume New Selected Poems 1968-1994 (Faber and Faber, London). The newspaper cited the manner in which the collection "highlights Muldoon's witty, personal voice and inventive use of language, which often draws on daily routine and the topical." The citation continued: "Muldoon's quizzical feel for his native Ulster is evident in poems possessing a strongly narrative, even anecdotal quality. This engaging and challenging volume includes many instances of adroitly intellectual wordplay and literary cross-references."
Muldoon won the 1995 T.S. Eliot Poetry Prize for

63. Princeton - News - Poem Delivered By Paul Muldoon At Memorial Service, Cannon Gr
Memorial Service, Cannon Green September 16, 2001. Poem delivered by paul MuldoonHoward GB Clark '21 University Professor in the Humanities. September 1, 1939.
http://www.princeton.edu/pr/news/01/q3/0916-poem.htm
Princeton University
Memorial Service, Cannon Green
September 16, 2001
Poem delivered by
Paul Muldoon
Howard G.B. Clark '21 University Professor in the Humanities
September 1, 1939
by W. H. Auden More information about W. H. Auden and about the poem is available at the Auden Society Web site
September 1, 1939
/pr/news/01/q3/0916-poem.htm
Professor of the Council of the Humanities and Creative Writing
Director, Program in Creative Writing
Chair, Fund for Irish Studies

64. LRB | Paul Muldoon
If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB clickhere. Quick Search. LRB contributors paul muldoon. paul muldoon.
http://www.lrb.co.uk/contribhome.php?get=muld01

65. LRB | Paul Muldoon : Diary
Diary. paul muldoon. paul muldoon is the author of a libretto, Bandanna,and a translation, with Richard Martin, of Aristophanes' The Birds.
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v21/n13/muld01_.html
HOME SUBSCRIBE LOGIN CONTACTS ...
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Subscribers to the LRB currently get free access to the full content of the magazine in an online edition. If you are a subscriber and would like to register for online access click here If you are already registered you can log in from our login page If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB click here LRB Vol. 21 No. 13 dated 1 July 1999 Paul Muldoon tell a friend
Diary
Paul Muldoon
This article is not currently available online. If you would like to purchase the back issue containing this article (if available) please click here Paul Muldoon is the author of a libretto, Bandanna , and a translation, with Richard Martin, of Aristophanes' The Birds . He teaches at Princeton and is Professor of Poetry at Oxford. From the LRB letters page: [ 15 July 1999 ] Giles Foden J.G. Owen Other articles available from the 1 July 1999 issue Most Curious of Seas
Richard Fortey
: Noah's Flood Apocalypse Not Just Now
Mark Greenberg
: the doomsday argument Nobel Savage
Steven Shapin
on Kary Mullis HOME SUBSCRIBE LOGIN CONTACTS ... privacy

66. Eye - BOOKS Paul Muldoon, With Jackie Kay, Robin Skelton And
HARBOURFRONT POETRY FESTIVAL May 38, The Brigantine Room, York Quay Centre, 235Queen's Quay W., 973-4000 paul muldoon, with Jackie Kay, Robin Skelton and
http://www.eye.net/Arts/Books/1993/bo0429a.htm
This document has moved. Click here if you are not automatically redirected.

67. Paul Muldoon Aisling
paul muldoon Aisling. I was making my way home late one night. this summer,when l staggered. into a snow drift. Her eyes spoke of a sloeyear,.
http://home1.inet.tele.dk/jenskoch/aisling/aisquoof.htm
Paul Muldoon Aisling I was making my way home late one night this summer, when l staggered into a snow drift. Her eyes spoke of a sloe-year, her mouth a year of haws. Was she Aurora, or the goddess Flora, Artemidora, or Venus bright, or Anorexia, who left a lemon stain on my flannel sheet? lt's all much of a muchness. In Belfast's Royal Victoria Hospital a kidney machine supports the latest hunger-striker to have called off his fast, a saline drip into his bag of brine. A lick and a promise. Cuckoo spittle. l hand my sample to Doctor Maw. She gives me back a confident All Clear Another Aisling of a more traditional nature, while here is a much more modern text by Shane MacGowan ALSO FROM "QUOOF"
Yggdrasill
From below, the waist-thick pine seemed to arch its back. lt is a birch, perhaps. At any rate, l could discern a slight curvature of the spine. They were gathered in knots to watch me go. A pony fouled the hard-packed snow with her glib cairn, someone opened a can of apricots. As l climb my nose is pressed to the bark.

68. [minstrels] Meeting The British -- Paul Muldoon
1153 Meeting the British. Title Meeting the British. Poet paul muldoon. Date 23 Jan 2003. paul muldoon. I find this poem slightly chilling, to be honest.
http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/1153.html
[1153] Meeting the British
Title : Meeting the British Poet : Paul Muldoon Date : 23 Jan 2003 We met the British i... Length : Text-only version Prev Index Next Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [ microfaq Meeting the British We met the British in the dead of winter. The sky was lavender and the snow lavender-blue. I could hear, far below, the sound of two streams coming together (both were frozen over) and, no less strange, myself calling out in French across that forest- clearing. Neither General Jeffrey Amherst nor Colonel Henry Bouquet could stomach our willow-tobacco. As for the unusual scent when the Colonel shook out his hand- kerchief: C'est la lavande, une fleur mauve comme le ciel. They gave us six fishhooks and two blankets embroidered with smallpox. Paul Muldoon I find this poem slightly chilling, to be honest. It seems almost innocent until the final word, which suddenly makes the entire poem incredibly ominous. The half rhymes increase the growing sense of unease as the native Americans in Canada meet the British colonisers and the reader becomes gradually aware of all the consequences of this meeting. There is no real point of first contact between the two sides shown in the poem - the native American narrator is already able to describe the sky and snow as lavender, which blurs the narrative voice somewhat [That would have been through their earlier contact with the French, though. Still, I see Mel's point -martin]. Muldoon makes full use of hindsight and poetic device to create a poem sinister yet political. Mel Links: Biography of Muldoon:

69. The Mac Weekly: Paul Muldoon's Latest: A Master Poet Writ(h)es Again
October 18, 2002 . VOLUME 95 . NUMBER 6 . BACK TO HEADLINES . ARCHIVES. paul muldoon'slatest A master poet writ(h)es again By BILL RAGALIE Contributing Writer
http://www.macalester.edu/weekly/101802/arts3.html
October 18, 2002 . VOLUME 95 . NUMBER 6 . BACK TO HEADLINES ARCHIVES
Paul Muldoon's latest: A master poet writ(h)es again
By BILL RAGALIE
Contributing Writer

Paul Muldoon is a 51-year old Belfast native, teacher at Princeton and also the Professor of Poetry at Oxford (a position once held by his mentor, Seamus Heaney). He also carries the unofficial title of "the most significant English-language poet born since the Second World War" ( Times Literary Supplement ) through his unique combination of honesty, complexity, and an amazing ear for the spoken word. In his ninth collection of poems, Moy Sand and Gravel (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 105 pp., $22), Muldoon shows that he is still quite capable of giving his readership what a critic once called "linguistic euphoria"
What is most surprising about Moy Sand and Gravel is that it is not a surprising work, considering that it comes from the ever-changing Muldoon. His preceding collection, 1998's Hay , was proof of a poet willing, eager, and careful to make each new book a step in a daringly new direction. This is not to say that Moy Sand isn't conscious of its place within Muldoon's collected body of work, yet it still seems more an extension of

70. Paul Muldoon
Click on either the booksirish logo or the author's name to go theredirectly. paul muldoon. paul muldoon was born in Co Armagh.
http://www.irishwriters-online.com/paulmuldoon.html
The dates and publishers given here are for first editions. However, I realise you may be looking for current editions, so in-print books by Paul Muldoon may be purchased directly from
the internet shop front of the independent Irish book seller Books Upstairs , Dublin. Click on either the booksirish logo or the author's name to go there directly.
Paul Muldoon
list MN Index list O

71. Remapping America: Paul Muldoon’s Madoc—A Mystery
Remapping America paul muldoon’s Madoc—A Mystery Shane Murphy, King’sCollege, University of Aberdeen Shane Murphy is a Lecturer in the English
http://www.people.virginia.edu/~dpm5h/murphy.html
ISSN:1096–6129
Remapping America: Paul Muldoon’s Madoc—A Mystery
Shane Murphy, King’s College, University of Aberdeen
Shane Murphy is a Lecturer in the English Department at King’s College, University of Aberdeen. He has published articles on Irish poetry and drama in journals such as Irish University Review, Éire-Ireland, New Hibernia Review , and Etudes-Irlandaises
Maps are not objective texts divorced from politics; rather, they embody the assumptions of those who construct them. Simon Ryan’s monograph entitled The Cartographic Eye expands upon this theme, explaining how “the textualisation of landscape by the explorers reifies space as a blank text , ready to be inscribed on by the impending colonial process” (123). This blankness, while it to some extent represents ignorance, also functions as “a screen on which European fantasies may be projected” (117). In his article, “Inventing America: A Model of Cartographic Semiosis,” William Boelhower acknowledges the political nature of cartographic discourse and delineates the colonial functions of map-making in the formation of the Euro-American identity. Boelhower states, crucially, that “the map preceeded the people and then assumed a normative role in pre-establishing a spatial order for solving the political problem of the one and the many in its territorial and ethnographic forms” (478-89). In this way, the maps themselves are thought to legitimate conquest and empire. The use of three types of maps in particular—the pictorial map (contact and discovery), the portolan chart (the activity of colonization), and the scale map (nation-building)—emphasized the equation between sight and knowledge (Boelhower, “Inventing” 480-3). The improvements in surveying, map projections and printing also fostered this scopic regime, engendering a paradigm shift which promoted a visualization of the land to enable its conquest, appropriation, subdivision, commodification, and surveillance (Harley, “Rereading” 523-24). The colonizer’s power is manifest, therefore, within the map’s graphic nature, imposing a co-ordinate geometry and Euclidean syntax upon a territory (Harley, “Maps” 282), erasing the pre-existent Native American boundaries and trap-lines.

72. APR Jan/Feb 2001 Vol. 30/No. 1 | Paul Muldoon
The American Poetry Review paul muldoon paul muldoon, who was born in NorthernIreland in 1951, is the author of eight collections of poetry.
http://www.aprweb.org/issues/jan01/muldoon.html
Paul Muldoon excerpt from The End Of the Poem: "The Mountain" by Robert Frost The sense of the phrase "The End of the Poem" on which I'll focus here has to do with the influence of one poem on another within the body of work of a single poet, whereby the "gaps" or "blanks" in one poem are completed or perfected by anotherwhereby what is missing in "The Mountain," for example, is also bodied out in "Directive"and that the "body" of the work is indivisible from the "body" of the poet. That this consideration of what is missing might be one of the "subjects" of "The Mountain" is signaled from the outset: The mountain held the town as in a shadow.
I saw so much before I slept there once:
I noticed that I missed stars in the west The very first line contains another clue to the secret life of "The Mountain," part of which has to do with Frost's own name. We'll meet the poet's name more obviously in lines 50-54, where the "man who moved so slow" is describing a stream: 'One of the great sights going is to see
It steam in winter like an ox's breath

73. Boston Review: Ciaran Carson, Paul Muldoon, Richard Murphy
Selected Poems. Ciaran Carson Wake Forest, $12.95 (paper). Poems 19681998. PaulMuldoon Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $19 (paper). Collected Poems 1952-2000.
http://bostonreview.mit.edu/BR27.2/ogrady.html
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Selected Poems

Ciaran Carson
Wake Forest, $12.95 (paper) Poems 1968-1998
Paul Muldoon Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $19 (paper)

74. Paul Muldoon - Poetry-in-the-Round - Seton Hall Univeristy
paul muldoon. September 15. The Irish poet paul muldoon has been called the Cassius Clay of poetry (Publisher's Weekly), one of
http://artsci.shu.edu/poetry/previous/paulmuldoon.html
paul muldoon September 15 The Irish poet PAUL MULDOON has been called "the Cassius Clay of poetry" ( Publisher's Weekly ), "one of the most inventive and ambitious poets working today ( The Times , London), "an original genius, using words in a new way" (A. S. Byatt), and "one of the era's true geniuses" (Seamus Heaney). We are delighted to begin our fall series with a celebration of Muldoon's newest book of poems, Hay , his ninth collection, which will be published (by Farrar, Straus, and Giroux) a few days before his reading at Seton Hall. By turns glorious and witty, elegant and edgy, this new book is sure to bring even wider acclaim for "the much-laurelled Irish wonder-poet" ( The Independent on Sunday , London). Paul Muldoon's earlier books of poetry include New Weather, Why Brownee Left, Meeting the British , and The Annals of Chile , for which he received the T. S. Eliot Prize and the Irish Times Literature Prize for Poetry.

75. Talkaboutbooks Discussion Board @www.ezboard.com
Author, Comment. wador Unregistered User (1/4/03 65001 pm) Reply,allusions in paul muldoon's poem Immram Anybody can help me find
http://pub13.ezboard.com/ftalkaboutbooksfrm9.showMessage?topicID=114.topic

76. Paul Muldoon
peopleAlmanac—People—Biographies—Entertainment Biographies—M paul Muldoonpoet Born 1951 Birthplace Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland.
http://www.factmonster.com/cgi-bin/id/A0901435.html

Almanac
People Biographies Entertainment Biographies ... M Paul Muldoon poet
Born:
Birthplace:
Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland
New York Times , Muldoon was born to a schoolteacher mother and laborer father. He began writing poetry in Irish but turned to English after he went to Queen's University, Belfast, where he encountered and was encouraged by Nobel-winning poet Seamus Heaney. While still a student, he had his first volume of poetry, New Weather, published. After graduation he worked as a producer at the BBC Belfast, then in 1986, moved to the U.S., where he lives with his wife, novelist Jean Hanff Korelitz, and their two children. His poetry collections include Why Brownlee Left Meeting the British (1987), and Kerry Slides (1996). He has penned the lyrics for a number of operas by Daron Hagen, among them, Shining Brow (1993). He teaches creative writing at Princeton University, and, in 1999 was elected Professor of Poetry at Oxford, which requires him to give three lectures a year. Muldoon has been awarded the Sir Geoffrey Faber Memorial Award 1991, the T. S. Eliot Award in 1994, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature (1996).
Karen Mulder
M
Patrick Muldoon AD AD AD AD AD
Print this page Cite this page Awards and Press Link to Fact Monster Add Fact Monster search ... Privacy

77. Paul Muldoon
peopleAlmanac—People—Biographies—Entertainment Biographies—M paul Muldoonpoet Born 1951 Birthplace Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland.
http://www.factmonster.com/ipka/A0901435.html

Almanac
People Biographies Entertainment Biographies ... M Paul Muldoon poet
Born:
Birthplace:
Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland
New York Times , Muldoon was born to a schoolteacher mother and laborer father. He began writing poetry in Irish but turned to English after he went to Queen's University, Belfast, where he encountered and was encouraged by Nobel-winning poet Seamus Heaney. While still a student, he had his first volume of poetry, New Weather, published. After graduation he worked as a producer at the BBC Belfast, then in 1986, moved to the U.S., where he lives with his wife, novelist Jean Hanff Korelitz, and their two children. His poetry collections include Why Brownlee Left Meeting the British (1987), and Kerry Slides (1996). He has penned the lyrics for a number of operas by Daron Hagen, among them, Shining Brow (1993). He teaches creative writing at Princeton University, and, in 1999 was elected Professor of Poetry at Oxford, which requires him to give three lectures a year. Muldoon has been awarded the Sir Geoffrey Faber Memorial Award 1991, the T. S. Eliot Award in 1994, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature (1996).
Karen Mulder
M
Patrick Muldoon AD AD AD AD AD
Print this page Cite this page Awards and Press Link to Fact Monster Add Fact Monster search ... Privacy

78. Enforcement
Location CELA PUBLICATIONS Subject 1. Compliance 2. Environmental law OntarioCanadian Environmental Law Association; muldoon, paul; Swenarchuk, Michelle.
http://www.ecolawinfo.org/bibliographies/enforcement.htm
ENFORCEMENT Books and reports Internet links BOOKS AND REPORTS: Deregulation, self-regulation and compliance in administrative law: impact on clients, boards, and the public interest
North York: Osgoode Hall Law School of York University, March, 1996. Separately paged sections. RN18839. Location: BOOKSHELVES: ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
Subject: 1. Administrative law 2. Compliance 3. Environmental regulation - Voluntary 4. Environmental law - Canada 5. Environmental management 6. Environmental policy - Federal 7. Mining - Law and regulation Canada. House of Commons. Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable Development. Enforcing Canada's pollution laws the public interest must come first!: third report
Ottawa: May, 1998. (Report) 68 p. RN23527. Location: BOOKSHELVES: ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
Subject: 1. Environmental law - Canada 2. Compliance 3. Law enforcement 4. Environmental law - Deregulation 5. Toxic substances - Mercury - Law and regulation 6. Canada. Canadian Environmental Protection Act 7. Canada. Fisheries Act 8. Environmental law - Federal/Provincial jurisdiction
Canada. House of Commons. Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable Development.

79. GIGA Quote Author Page For Paul Muldoon
GIGA's compilation of quotations, excerpts, proverbs, maxims and aphorismsby paul muldoon. Home Page Biographical Index Reading
http://www.giga-usa.com/gigaweb1/quotes2/quautmuldoonpaulx001.htm
Home Page Biographical Index Reading List Internet Links ...
Quote Links
AUTHOR LAST NAME: A B C D ... Z
TOPICS FOR QUOTES: A B C D ...
QUOTATIONS
GIGA QUOTES BY AUTHOR PAUL MULDOON
Irish poet (1951 - )
BUY BOOK RELATED TO

PAUL MULDOON
I thought of you tonight, a leanbh, lying there in your long barrow,
colder and dumber than a fish by Francisco de Herrera.
Incantata Fish
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in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office by John C. Shepard.
Last Revised: 2003 February 25

80. Bates College | 03-04-99 POET PAUL MULDOON TO READ
March 4, 1999, Release No. 361 Contact Marc Glass Phone (207) 7866330.FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE. Poet paul muldoon to read at Bates March 18.
http://www.bates.edu/x1427.xml

About Bates
Academics Admissions Student Life ... 03-04-99 POET PAUL MULDOON TO READ 03-04-99 POET PAUL MULDOON TO READ March 4, 1999 Release No. 361
Contact: Marc Glass
Phone: (207) 786-6330
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Poet Paul Muldoon to read at Bates March 18
LEWISTON, Maine Poet Paul Muldoon will read from his works at Bates College March 18 at 8 p.m. in Chase Hall Lounge. The reading is sponsored by the Bates College Department of English. The public is invited to attend without charge. Muldoon, who teaches English at Princeton University, is widely regarded as among the best in the generation of Northern Irish poets born after World War II. Among Muldoon's nine collections of poetry are "Selected Poems 1968 87," "Madoc: A Mystery," "The Annals of Chile" and "Hay."

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