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A Companion to Irish Literature


A Companion to Irish Literature


Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture, Band 139 1. Aufl.

von: Julia M. Wright

65,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 08.07.2011
ISBN/EAN: 9781444351699
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 1000

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Beschreibungen

<p><b>Featuring new essays by international literary scholars, the two-volume <i>Companion to Irish Literature</i> encompasses the full breadth of Ireland's literary tradition from the Middle Ages to the present day.</b></p> <ul> <li>Covers an unprecedented historical range of Irish literature</li> <li>Arranged in two volumes covering Irish literature from the medieval period to 1900, and its development through the twentieth century to the present day</li> <li>Presents a re-visioning of twentieth-century Irish literature and a collection of the most up-to-date scholarship in the field as a whole</li> <li>Includes a substantial number of women writers from the eighteenth century to the present day</li> <li>Includes essays on leading contemporary authors, including Brian Friel, Seamus Heaney, Eavan Boland, Roddy Doyle, and Emma Donoghue</li> <li>Introduces readers to the wide range of current approaches to studying Irish literature</li> </ul>
<p><b>VOLUME I</b></p> <p>Acknowledgments xi</p> <p>Notes on Contributors xiii</p> <p>Introduction 1<br /> <i>Julia M. Wright</i></p> <p><b>Part One: The Middle Ages 15</b></p> <p>1. Táin Bó Cúailnge 17<br /> <i>Ann Dooley</i></p> <p>2. Finn and the Fenian Tradition 27<br /> <i>Joseph Falaky Nagy</i></p> <p>3. The Reception and Assimilation of Continental Literature 39<br /> <i>Barbara Lisa Hillers</i></p> <p><b>Part Two: The Early Modern Era 57</b></p> <p>4. Bardic Poetry, Masculinity, and the Politics of Male Homosociality 59<br /> <i>Sarah E. McKibben</i></p> <p>5. Annalists and Historians in Early Modern Ireland, 1450–1700 76<br /> <i>Bernadette Cunningham</i></p> <p>6. “Hungry Eyes” and the Rhetoric of Dispossession: English Writing from Early Modern Ireland 92<br /> <i>Patricia Palmer</i></p> <p>7. Kinds of Irishness: Henry Burnell and Richard Head 108<br /> <i>Deana Rankin</i></p> <p><b>Part Three: The Eighteenth Century 125</b></p> <p>8. Crossing Acts: Irish Drama from George Farquhar to Thomas Sheridan 127<br /> <i>Helen M. Burke</i></p> <p>9. Parnell and Early Eighteenth-Century Irish Poetry 142<br /> <i>Andrew Carpenter</i></p> <p>10. Jonathan Swift and Eighteenth-Century Ireland 161<br /> <i>Clement Hawes</i></p> <p>11. Merriman’s Cúirt An Mheonoíche and Eighteenth-Century Irish Verse 178<br /> <i>Liam P. Ó Murchú</i></p> <p>12. Frances Sheridan and Ireland 193<br /> <i>Kathleen M. Oliver</i></p> <p><br /> 13. “The Indigent Philosopher”: Oliver Goldsmith 210<br /> <i>James Watt</i></p> <p>14. Edmund Burke 226<br /> <i>Luke Gibbons</i></p> <p>15. The Drama of Richard Brinsley Sheridan 243<br /> <i>Robert W. Jones</i></p> <p><b>Part Four: The Romantic Period 259</b></p> <p>16. United Irish Poetry and Songs 261<br /> <i>Mary Helen Thuente</i></p> <p>17. Maria Edgeworth and (Inter)national Intelligence 276<br /> <i>Susan Manly</i></p> <p>18. Mary Tighe: A Portrait of the Artist for the Twenty-First Century 292<br /> <i>Harriet Kramer Linkin</i></p> <p>19. Thomas Moore: After the Battle 310<br /> <i>Jeffery Vail</i></p> <p>20. The Role of the Political Woman in the Writings of Lady Morgan (Sydney Owenson) 326<br /> <i>Susan B. Egenolf</i></p> <p><b>Part Five: The Rise of Gothic 343</b></p> <p>21. Charles Robert Maturin: Ireland’s Eccentric Genius 345<br /> <i>Robert Miles</i></p> <p>22. Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu: Gothic Grotesque and the Huguenot Inheritance 362<br /> <i>Alison Milbank</i></p> <p>23. A Philosophical Home Ruler: The Imaginary Geographies of Bram Stoker 377<br /> <i>Lisa Hopkins</i></p> <p><b>Part Six: The Victorian Era 393</b></p> <p>24. Scribes and Storytellers: The Ethnographic Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Ireland 395<br /> <i>Stiofán Ó Cadhla</i></p> <p>25. Reconciliation and Emancipation: The Banims and Carleton 411<br /> <i>Helen O’Connell</i></p> <p>26. Davis, Mangan, Ferguson: Irish Poetry, 1831–1849 427<br /> <i>Matthew Campbell</i></p> <p>27. The Great Famine in Literature, 1846–1896 444<br /> <i>Melissa Fegan</i></p> <p>28. Dion Boucicault: From Stage Irishman to Staging Nationalism 460<br /> Scott Boltwood</p> <p>29. Oscar Wilde’s Convictions, Speciesism, and the Pain of Individualism 476<br /> <i>Dennis Denisoff</i></p> <p><b>VOLUME TWO</b></p> <p>Introduction 1<br /> <i>Julia M. Wright</i></p> <p><b>Part Seven: Transitions: Victorian, Revival, Modern 17</b></p> <p>30. Cultural Nationalism and Irish Modernism 19<br /> <i>Michael Mays</i></p> <p>31. Defining Irishness: Bernard Shaw and the Irish Connection on the English Stage 35<br /> <i>Christopher Innes</i></p> <p>32. The Novels of Somerville and Ross 50<br /> <i>Vera Kreilkamp</i></p> <p>33. W.B. Yeats and the Dialectics of Misrecognition 66<br /> <i>Gregory Castle</i></p> <p>34. John Millington Synge – Playwright and Poet 83<br /> <i>Ann Saddlemyer</i></p> <p>35. James Joyce and the Creation of Modern Irish Literature 98<br /> <i>Michael Patrick Gillespie</i></p> <p><b>Part Eight: Developments in Genre and Representation after 1930 113</b></p> <p>36. The Word of Politics/Politics of the Word: Immanence and Transdescendence in Sean O’Casey and Samuel Beckett 115<br /> <i>Sandra Wynands</i></p> <p>37. Elizabeth Bowen: A Home in Writing 129<br /> <i>Eluned Summers-Bremner</i></p> <p>38. Changing Times: Frank O’Connor and Seán O’Faoláin 144<br /> <i>Paul Delaney</i></p> <p>39. “Ireland is small enough”: Louis MacNeice and Patrick Kavanagh 159<br /> <i>Alan Gillis</i></p> <p>40. Irish Mimes: Flann O’Brien 176<br /> <i>Joseph Brooker</i></p> <p><b>Part Nine: Debating Social Change after 1960 193</b></p> <p>41. Reading William Trevor and Finding Protestant Ireland 195<br /> <i>Gregory A. Schirmer</i></p> <p>42. The Mythopoeic Ireland of Edna O’Brien’s Fiction 209<br /> <i>Maureen O’Connor</i></p> <p>43. Anglo-Irish Confl ict in Jennifer Johnston’s Fiction 224<br /> <i>Silvia Diez Fabre</i></p> <p>44. Living History: The Importance of Julia O’Faolain’s Fiction 234<br /> <i>Christine St Peter</i></p> <p>45. Holding a Mirror Up to a Society in Evolution: John McGahern 248<br /> <i>Eamon Maher</i></p> <p><b>Part Ten: Contemporary Literature: Print, Stage, and Screen 263</b></p> <p>46. Brian Friel: From Nationalism to Post-Nationalism 265<br /> <i>F.C. McGrath</i></p> <p>47. Telling the Truth Slant: The Poetry of Seamus Heaney 281<br /> <i>Eugene O’Brien</i></p> <p>48. Belfast Poets: Michael Longley, Derek Mahon, and Medbh McGuckian 296<br /> <i>Richard Rankin Russell</i></p> <p>49. Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin’s Work of Witness 312<br /> <i>Guinn Batten</i></p> <p>50. Eavan Boland’s Muse Mothers 328<br /> <i>Heather Clark</i></p> <p>51. John Banville’s Dualistic Universe 345<br /> <i>Elke D’hoker</i></p> <p>52. Between History and Fantasy: The Irish Films of Neil Jordan 360<br /> <i>Brian McIlroy</i></p> <p>53. “Keeping That Wound Green”: The Poetry of Paul Muldoon 374<br /> <i>David Wheatley</i></p> <p>54. Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and the “Continuously Contemporary” 390<br /> <i>Frank Sewell</i></p> <p>55. The Anxiety of Infl uence and the Fiction of Roddy Doyle 410<br /> <i>Danine Farquharson</i></p> <p>56. The Reclamation of “Injurious Terms” in Emma Donoghue’s Fiction 425<br /> <i>Jennifer M. Jeffers</i></p> <p>57. Martin McDonagh and the Ethics of Irish Storytelling 436<br /> <i>Patrick Lonergan</i></p> <p><i>Index 451</i></p>
<p><b>Julia M. Wright</b> is Canada Research Chair in European Studies at Dalhousie University, Canada. She is the author of <i>Blake, Nationalism, and the Politics of Alienation</i> (2004) and <i>Ireland, India and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Literature</i> (2007), and the editor of <i>Irish Literature, 1750-1900: An Anthology</i> (Wiley-Blackwell, 2008).</p>
<p>The two-volume <i>Companion to Irish Literature</i> covers an unprecedented historical range of Irish literature from the Middle Ages to the present day. Featuring nearly 60 original essays written by a distinguished cast of literary scholars, the <i>Companion</i> explores poetry, drama, and fiction in both English- and Irish-language traditions. Volume One, dedicated to Irish literature from the medieval period to 1900, features essays on topics such as early modern annalists and nineteenth-century Famine writing, together with essays on canonical writers including Swift, Morgan, Carleton, LeFanu, and Wilde. The second volume follows the development of Irish literature through the twentieth century, covering key figures such as Joyce, Yeats, Synge, Beckett, Bowen, Friel, Heaney, Ní Dhomhnaill, McDonagh, and many more. The collection introduces readers to a range of contemporary approaches to Irish studies, from formalism to feminism, from biographical criticism to queer theory, and from new historicism to postcolonial theory. <i>A Companion to Irish Literature</i> is an invaluable and long-awaited resource to the sweeping scope of Ireland's rich literary history.</p>
<i>“Feminist Literary Theory</i> is an indispensable guide, companion and handbook for students and teachers of women’s literature. No other anthology offers so many bite-sized tasters of work on gendered authorship, literary production, critical reception, sexuality and genre – from romantic fiction to travel writing. Mary Eagleton’s clear and informative introductions contextualize the debates represented by each extract, suggest connections between them and point to further reading. This Third Edition maintains and develops the irreplaceable breadth of the previous editions with several new pieces on such areas as autobiography, science fiction and border talk. The extra section, ‘Writing Glocal’, investigates dynamically evolving dialogues between feminism and postcolonialism, diaspora narratives and transculturalism. Whether you read from start to finish or choose to sample selectively, this rich collection will expand your knowledge and understanding of feminist thought, both as an historical discipline and as an excitingly relevant and progressive set of ideas.”<br /> —<i>Jane Dowson</i><i>, De Montfort University.</i>

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