Sally Connolly (Irish, Saidhbhe Ní Conghalaigh), is a writer and academic.

Sally Connolly
Born1976
NationalityBritish, Irish, American
Other namesSaidhbhe Ní Conghalaigh
Occupation(s)Academic, literary critic
AwardsKennedy Scholarship
Academic background
EducationUniversity College London
Harvard University
Alma materUniversity College London (BA, MA, PhD)
Academic work
DisciplineLiterary Criticism
Sub-disciplinePoetry
InstitutionsUniversity of Houston
Main interestsElegy, Prosody and Meter (poetry), Literary Representations of Disaster, Modernist Epic (literature), New Formalism, Poetic Influence.

Life edit

Sally Connolly attended St Albans School, Hertfordshire, where her teachers included the poet John Mole,[1] and University College London and Harvard University, where she was a Kennedy Scholar.[2] She studied for her doctorate under the supervision of the poet Mark Ford and at Harvard with Helen Vendler and Seamus Heaney. She has published widely on twentieth- and twenty-first century British, Irish and American Poetry and is a practitioner of the school of close, attentive reading espoused by critics such as Vendler, Peter Sacks, and Christopher Ricks.[3]

She is Martha Gano Houstoun Research Professor of English Literature at The University of Houston.[4][5] Her 2016 book Grief and Meter is the first in the field of elegy studies to consider elegies for poets as a significant elegiac subgenre for which she coins the term "genealogical elegies." The British critic John Sutherland (author) describes Grief and Meter as "unusually thought provoking" and praises her "refreshingly sharp close readings".[6] Matthew Creasy writes in a review in This Year's Work in English Studies (Oxford) that Grief and Meter is an "eloquent and finely observed study of the elegy for a poet as a genre, a mode and, above all, a form. Her introduction begins with Auden, and Connolly devotes a chapter to reading ‘In Memory of W.B Yeats’ as ‘the touchstone genealogical elegy of the twentieth century and beyond’. Subsequent chapters explore the working out of Auden’s influence in poetry by Joseph Brodsky, John Berryman, Robert Lowell, and Seamus Heaney. This choice of poets reveals Connolly’s opening image of Auden on the steamship to America in January 1939 as a kind of conceptual pun for her interest in transatlantic poetics. As well as a lively account of elegiac form that draws on well-established work in this area by Peter Sacks, Connolly also offers her deft close readings as a corrective to the ‘distant reading’ of genres and forms offered by Franco Moretti and others."[7]

In relation to her second book Ranches of Isolation, Stephanie Burt writes that Connolly "has a sharp ear for how poetry sounds, for where it originates and where it ends up, and she’s in a good position to say, not just thanks to her knowledge of things Irish and Irish English and British English and American, but thanks to her knowledge about the guts of poems: past and present, early-career and deeply canonical, out-there and close to the heart, outspoken and close to the vest, get attention in Connolly’s personal, thoughtful, pellucid language. The Anglophone world needs more poetry critics so careful, so thoughtful, so able to speak their minds."[8]

She is working on a book about AIDS Poetry.[9]

Connolly is a contributor to the Times Literary Supplement,[10] Poetry (magazine)[11] and The London Evening Standard.[12]

Selected works edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ranches of Isolation by Sally Connolly | MadHat Press". MadHat Press.
  2. ^ "Full List of Kennedy Scholars".
  3. ^ Levay, Matthew; Radford, Andrew; Krzakowski, Caroline; Keese, Andrew; Dick, Maria-daniella; Livingstone, Catriona; Tweed, Hannah; MartÍn, Gustavo A RodrÍGuez; Saunders, Graham; Baker, William; Creasy, Matthew; O’Hanlon, Karl; Hanna, Adam (2018). "XVModern Literature" (PDF). The Year's Work in English Studies. 97 (1): 889–1030. doi:10.1093/ywes/may015. ISSN 0084-4144.
  4. ^ "Dr Sally Connolly".
  5. ^ "Found: Former UH graduate students discover 'forgotten' Anne Sexton poetry". HoustonChronicle.com. 16 October 2018.
  6. ^ "Grief and Meter".
  7. ^ Levay, Matthew; Radford, Andrew; Krzakowski, Caroline; Keese, Andrew; Dick, Maria-daniella; Livingstone, Catriona; Tweed, Hannah; MartÍn, Gustavo A RodrÍGuez; Saunders, Graham; Baker, William; Creasy, Matthew; O’Hanlon, Karl; Hanna, Adam (2018). "XVModern Literature" (PDF). The Year's Work in English Studies. 97 (1): 889–1030. doi:10.1093/ywes/may015. ISSN 0084-4144.
  8. ^ "Ranches of Isolation by Sally Connolly | MadHat Press". MadHat Press.
  9. ^ "Alas, poor Yorick". perspectivemag.co.uk. 11 May 2023.
  10. ^ "Sally Connolly". TheTLS.
  11. ^ Connolly, Sally (15 November 2018). "Sally Connolly". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
  12. ^ "Author Page: London Evening Standard".
  13. ^ Connolly, Sally (15 October 2018). Ranches of Isolation: Transatlantic Poetry. MadHat Press. ISBN 978-1-941196-79-3.
  14. ^ "Sally Connoly: Transatlantic Poetics: An Autobiography - Plume". Plume. 19 December 2017.
  15. ^ Grief and Meter. University of Virginia Press. 2016. ISBN 978-0813938646.
  16. ^ Yeats annual. No. 17, Influence and confluence. Palgrave Macmillan. 15 January 2008. ISBN 978-0-230-54689-9.
  17. ^ "Book Reviews". The European Legacy (14:4): 473–507. 2009.
  18. ^ George Bornstein (2009). "Of What is Past, or Passing, or To Come': Recent Yeats Scholarship". Modernism/Modernity. 16 (3): 609–614. doi:10.1353/mod.0.0116. S2CID 144325187.

External links edit