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'Flannery asks trenchant and vexing questions about the relationship between postcolonial criticism as a practice and Irish literary studies as a politics - questions that illuminate the shared, contentious ground between the two and demand attention from students of the "post-colony" across the globe. Hardly exceptional, though deeply historically contingent, the case of Ireland is clearly a matrix for post/colonial modernities of all kinds. Beyond Erin, Flannery's thoughtful and canny readings of a host of major and minor players offer innovative and eminently portableexemplars of radical humanism's heuristic promise.' - Antoinette Burton, Professor of History and Bastian Professor of Global and Transnational Studies, University of Illinois, USA
'Eóin Flannery ably maps the introduction and gradual establishment of postcolonial studies as a mainstay in Irish critical life. [...] It is a solid volume - both thorough and well researched [...] This crticial genealogy will interest anyone with a concern for the theory, history, and cultural criticism of Ireland and other postcolonies.' - Melanie McMahon, Irish Studies Review
'Ireland and Postcolonial Studies displays a strong expertise in Irish colonial and postcolonial history, but also in international postcolonial studies... While this book is mainly concerned with the Irish case and discusses Irish scholars... it is relevant to broader postcolonial studies in its exploration and application of the work international scholars such as Deepika Bahri, Pierre Bourdieu and Edward Said, to name just a few. Flannery has, in recent years, emerged as an expert in Irish postcolonial and utopian studies, and this is a highly interesting and knowledgeable text, of interest to scholars of both Irish and postcolonial studies.' - Routledge ABES June 2011