The political poetry produced over the last three decades in Britain and
Ireland is marked by a rich diversity of commitments and concerns, a
striving for the effective matching of poetic strategy and expressive
purpose. The poets considered in this collection of essays differ widely
in the intensity of their engagement and their ideological orientation.
Their poems address social injustice, civil liberties, ethnic conflict
and identity, sexual politics, green issues and urban development but
turn also to the politics of aesthetics and the political role of poetry
and the poet. One of the main objectives of this volume is to sound out
in how far all these different articulations of the political share
common poetic patterns and modes of address or seek to achieve their
political effects by completely different, even contrary, ways of
discursive approach. Another objective is to provide fresh answers to
the vexed question of what the benefits and limitations of a poetic
approach to politics may be.