Skip to Content

Event Listings

Seamus Heaney Memorial Lecture

The annual Seamus Heaney Memorial Lecture presented by the Keough-Naughton Institute at the University of Notre Dame, in partnership with Queen's University Belfast.

Date(s)
June 25, 2024
Location
Seamus Heaney Centre
Time
18:00 - 19:00

This lecture will explore moments of touch in Heaney's poetry. From the proximity of strangers, the intimate sensitivity of the skin, to the way words might "enter" the material world, the lecture will also make a case for the body as a primary instrument of reading, and will explore the sensuous demands that lyric poetry makes on us.
 
Seán Hewitt is the author of two poetry collections, Tongues of Fire (Cape, 2020), winner of the Laurel Prize, and Rapture's Road (Cape, 2024). His memoir, All Down Darkness Wide (Cape, 2022), won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. A collaboration with the artist Luke Edward Hall, 300,000 Kisses: Tales of Queer Love from the Ancient World, was published in 2023, and his debut novel, Open, Heaven, will be published in 2025. He is Assistant Professor at the Oscar Wilde Centre at Trinity College Dublin, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

The Seamus Heaney Memorial Lecture series was inaugurated in 2014, marking the first anniversary of the poet's death on August 30, 2013.

Heaney had a special relationship with the Keough-Naughton Institute and the University of Notre Dame. He visited the university in 1994 and 2003, giving poetry readings to overflowing auditoriums. In 2008, University President Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C. awarded Heaney an honorary degree at the Keough-Naughton Centre in Dublin. He was lifelong friend of Seamus Deane, the initial Donald and Marilyn Keough Chair of Irish Studies; the pair met as schoolmates at St. Columb’s College, a Catholic boys' grammar school in Derry, Northern Ireland.

While difficult to measure his influence, in response to Heaney’s passing, then-Taoiseach Enda Kenny said, “For us, Seamus Heaney was the keeper of language, our codes, our essence as a people. He belongs with Joyce, Yeats, Shaw, and Beckett in the pantheon of our greatest literary exponents.” This annual event honors his memory and his outstanding contributions to Irish and world literature.

Image: Stuart Simpson / Penguin Random House
Department
Audience
All
Add to calendar
Event Organiser Details
Email shc@qub.ac.uk