Eavan Boland
Eavan Boland (born September 24, 1944, Dublin, Ireland—died April 27, 2020, Dublin) was an Irish poet and literary critic whose expressive verse explored familiar domestic themes and examined both the isolation and the beauty of being a woman, wife, and mother.
Boland was educated in Dublin, London, and New York City, moving as a result of her father’s itinerant career as a diplomat and an academic. She graduated with honours from Trinity College, Cambridge (B.A., 1966), and became a freelance lecturer and journalist, notably as a critic for The Irish Times. After publishing early, unpolished poetry in the pamphlet 23 Poems (1962), she wrote New Territory (1967), a full-length book of 22 poems about Irish mythology, the creativity of artists, and her self-identity.
Introducing Eavan Boland (1981), her first volume of verse published outside Ireland, reprinted both The War Horse (1975), which contains controlled, conventionally styled poems about suburban life and political tension, and In Her Own Image (1980), featuring terse poetic narratives about women. The poems of Night Feed (1982) link her spiritual maturation to her new state of motherhood. The Journey (1983), which was expanded as The Journey and Other Poems (1987), infuses mythology into her discussion of women and children. Boland’s other books of poetry included Selected Poems (1989), Outside History (1990), In a Time of Violence (1994), Anna Liffey (1997), Against Love Poetry (2001), Domestic Violence (2007), and A Woman Without a Country (2014). Her final collection, The Historians, was published posthumously in 2020. A Kind of Scar (1989) is Boland’s prose study of female Irish poets. She also coauthored (with Micheál Mac Liammóir) a biography of the Irish poet William Butler Yeats entitled W.B. Yeats and His World (1998). A Journey with Two Maps: Becoming A Woman Poet was published in 2011.