This book retrieves a neglected episode in Left cultural histories, placing Irish writers in the company of a broader international group of poets, writers and journalists, who were part of a Popular Front cultural movement in the Thirties, opposed to fascism and witness to the Spanish Civil War.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
"This is a very accessible book, written to the highest academic and research standards. The extensive bibliography and footnotes are a pathway into the forgotten literary and political output of that generation. Goldstone explores the political and literary geography of the period and leaves, as she says, the abstract theory to others. Her book is a tribute to the 'dead singers of red songs everywhere'. Despite the outrageous price, for any reader or student who is interested in the 1930s radical tradition, this book is essential; borrow it from the library if necessary.
Paul O'Brien, Saothar 47, Journal of Irish Labour History, Spring 2022
"Katrina Goldstone's account of the activity of Irish left-wing writers in the Thirties is something of a revelation."
George O'Brien, Professor Emeritus of English at Georgetown University, Washington DC
"Goldstone shows an enviable familiarity with the careers and connections of those involved as well as a seemingly unsurpassable command of relevant materials, whether they be primary print sources, secondary critical material or, most impressively, unpublished archival matter such as drafts, memoirs and correspondence. For gathering all this in one place and attempting to construct a narrative of it, despite some difficulties in organising such a welter of data and a large cast of characters, Katrina Goldstone is to be warmly congratulated."
George O'Brien, Professor Emeritus of English at Georgetown University, Washington DC
Paul O'Brien, Saothar 47, Journal of Irish Labour History, Spring 2022
"Katrina Goldstone's account of the activity of Irish left-wing writers in the Thirties is something of a revelation."
George O'Brien, Professor Emeritus of English at Georgetown University, Washington DC
"Goldstone shows an enviable familiarity with the careers and connections of those involved as well as a seemingly unsurpassable command of relevant materials, whether they be primary print sources, secondary critical material or, most impressively, unpublished archival matter such as drafts, memoirs and correspondence. For gathering all this in one place and attempting to construct a narrative of it, despite some difficulties in organising such a welter of data and a large cast of characters, Katrina Goldstone is to be warmly congratulated."
George O'Brien, Professor Emeritus of English at Georgetown University, Washington DC