Finder Keepers

By Seamus Heaney
Image of Finders Keepers: Selected Prose 1971-2001
FormatUSUK
Paperback$18.00 Buy£11.27 Buy

Heaney dramatises the key value of distinctive individuality. We all want to be our own person and Heaney is someone whose individuality is highly distinctive and a person of strong virtues. This comes out not only in his writing but also in the way he lives.

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In an interview on The Cult of Celebrity

Interview Extract:

Tell me about your last book, Finder Keepers by Seamus Heaney.

I could happily have chosen any of his books, but I went for this collection of essays because I don’t want to be accused of being negative about the whole cult of celebrity. Seamus Heaney is part of my redress against this. One positive thing celebrities can do for us is to dramatise those values and meanings which we think of as important and commendable. They can do that in the tormented way of a gossip magazines or the admirable, generous-hearted but always accurate way which you find in Seamus Heaney’s collections of both poems and essays.

Heaney dramatises the key value of distinctive individuality. We all want to be our own person and Heaney is someone whose individuality is highly distinctive, which comes out not only in his writing but also in the way he lives. He is supremely alive to the conditions of life in the early 21st century. If you are going to be an individual he is a very good one to be. He is known, of course, as Famous Seamus and I think you see this heroic individuality in him, without any of the grislier aspects of fame.

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About Fred Inglis

Fred Inglis is Emeritus Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Sheffield. Previously Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Warwick, he has been a member of the School of Social Science at the Institute of Advanced Study, Princeton, and Fellow-in-Residence at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study.