@misc { , title = {'I know this labyrinth so well': narrative mappings in the poetry of Ciaran Carson}, abstract = {Ciaran Carson is increasingly recognised as a poet of place, of the city, and specifically of Belfast. However, Carson's work is also permeated by the Northern Irish Troubles in thoroughgoing ways. This essay elucidates the ways in which his poetry of place and his spatial poetics have developed in response to a particular set of historical circumstances and sectarian geographies. In contradistinction to the landscape of checkpoints and the static identities they enforce upon Belfast's inhabitants, Carson interrogates mapping processes to reveal the multitude of perspectives present in what is, for him, a polyvalent and indeterminate city. If the authority of the map is discredited in Ciaran Carson's poetry – particularly in The Irish for No (1987) and Belfast Confetti (1989) – the labyrinth is offered as an alternative model for a dynamic, open rendering of space.}, doi = {10.5949/liverpool/9781846318641.003.0008}, isbn = {9781846318641}, journal = {Poetry and geography: space and place in post-war poetry}, pages = {105-119}, publicationstatus = {Published}, publisher = {Liverpool University Press}, url = {https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/370697}, keyword = {Ciaran Carson, Poetry, Belfast, Troubles, Map, Labyrinth}, year = {2013}, author = {Weston, Daniel} editor = {Alexander, Neal and Cooper, David} }