Irish Literature in Transition, 1940-1980: Volume 5 (eBook, PDF)
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Irish Literature in Transition, 1940-1980: Volume 5 (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Patten, Eve
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A provocative range of essays on twentieth-century Irish authors, critics and culture framed in contexts of transition and transnationalism.
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A provocative range of essays on twentieth-century Irish authors, critics and culture framed in contexts of transition and transnationalism.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. März 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781108572361
- Artikelnr.: 66178009
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. März 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781108572361
- Artikelnr.: 66178009
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Introduction Eve Patten; Part I. After the War: Ideologies in Transition:
1. The Second World War and its literary legacies Guy Woodward; 2. Outside
the whale: Seán O'Faoláin and the European public intellectual Brad Kent;
3. Irish writers and Europe Aidan O'Malley; 4. Becoming a Republic: Irish
writing in transition Nicholas Allen; Part II. Genres in Transition: 5.
Intermodernism and the middlebrow in Irish writing John Brannigan; 6.
Transitional life writing: Frank O'Connor and the autobiographical
tradition Muireann Leech; 7. Somehow it is not the same: Irish theatre and
transition Chris Morash; 8. Samuel Beckett, Flann O'Brien and the
literature of absurdity David Wheatley; Part III. Sex, Politics and
Literary Protest: 9. Censorship, law and literature Eibhear Walshe; 10.
Sex, dissent and Irish fiction: reading John McGahern Frank Shovlin; 11.
History, memory and protest in Irish theatre Emilie Pine; 12. Violence,
politics and the poetry of the troubles Rosie Lavan; Part IV. Identities
and Connections: 13. State, space and experiment in Irish language prose
writing Máirín Nic Eoin; 14. Anglo-Ireland: the big house novel in
transition Heather Ingman; 15. American-Irish literary relations Ellen
McWilliams; 16. 'Home rule in our literature': Irish-British poetic
relations Tom Walker; Part V. Retrospective Frameworks: Criticism in
Transition: 17. Literary biography in transition Paul Delaney; 18.
Publishing, Penguin and Irish writing Paul Rooney; 19. Curriculum to canon:
Irish writing and education Margaret Kelleher; 20. Critics, criticism and
the formation of an Irish literary canon Shaun Richards.
1. The Second World War and its literary legacies Guy Woodward; 2. Outside
the whale: Seán O'Faoláin and the European public intellectual Brad Kent;
3. Irish writers and Europe Aidan O'Malley; 4. Becoming a Republic: Irish
writing in transition Nicholas Allen; Part II. Genres in Transition: 5.
Intermodernism and the middlebrow in Irish writing John Brannigan; 6.
Transitional life writing: Frank O'Connor and the autobiographical
tradition Muireann Leech; 7. Somehow it is not the same: Irish theatre and
transition Chris Morash; 8. Samuel Beckett, Flann O'Brien and the
literature of absurdity David Wheatley; Part III. Sex, Politics and
Literary Protest: 9. Censorship, law and literature Eibhear Walshe; 10.
Sex, dissent and Irish fiction: reading John McGahern Frank Shovlin; 11.
History, memory and protest in Irish theatre Emilie Pine; 12. Violence,
politics and the poetry of the troubles Rosie Lavan; Part IV. Identities
and Connections: 13. State, space and experiment in Irish language prose
writing Máirín Nic Eoin; 14. Anglo-Ireland: the big house novel in
transition Heather Ingman; 15. American-Irish literary relations Ellen
McWilliams; 16. 'Home rule in our literature': Irish-British poetic
relations Tom Walker; Part V. Retrospective Frameworks: Criticism in
Transition: 17. Literary biography in transition Paul Delaney; 18.
Publishing, Penguin and Irish writing Paul Rooney; 19. Curriculum to canon:
Irish writing and education Margaret Kelleher; 20. Critics, criticism and
the formation of an Irish literary canon Shaun Richards.
Introduction Eve Patten; Part I. After the War: Ideologies in Transition:
1. The Second World War and its literary legacies Guy Woodward; 2. Outside
the whale: Seán O'Faoláin and the European public intellectual Brad Kent;
3. Irish writers and Europe Aidan O'Malley; 4. Becoming a Republic: Irish
writing in transition Nicholas Allen; Part II. Genres in Transition: 5.
Intermodernism and the middlebrow in Irish writing John Brannigan; 6.
Transitional life writing: Frank O'Connor and the autobiographical
tradition Muireann Leech; 7. Somehow it is not the same: Irish theatre and
transition Chris Morash; 8. Samuel Beckett, Flann O'Brien and the
literature of absurdity David Wheatley; Part III. Sex, Politics and
Literary Protest: 9. Censorship, law and literature Eibhear Walshe; 10.
Sex, dissent and Irish fiction: reading John McGahern Frank Shovlin; 11.
History, memory and protest in Irish theatre Emilie Pine; 12. Violence,
politics and the poetry of the troubles Rosie Lavan; Part IV. Identities
and Connections: 13. State, space and experiment in Irish language prose
writing Máirín Nic Eoin; 14. Anglo-Ireland: the big house novel in
transition Heather Ingman; 15. American-Irish literary relations Ellen
McWilliams; 16. 'Home rule in our literature': Irish-British poetic
relations Tom Walker; Part V. Retrospective Frameworks: Criticism in
Transition: 17. Literary biography in transition Paul Delaney; 18.
Publishing, Penguin and Irish writing Paul Rooney; 19. Curriculum to canon:
Irish writing and education Margaret Kelleher; 20. Critics, criticism and
the formation of an Irish literary canon Shaun Richards.
1. The Second World War and its literary legacies Guy Woodward; 2. Outside
the whale: Seán O'Faoláin and the European public intellectual Brad Kent;
3. Irish writers and Europe Aidan O'Malley; 4. Becoming a Republic: Irish
writing in transition Nicholas Allen; Part II. Genres in Transition: 5.
Intermodernism and the middlebrow in Irish writing John Brannigan; 6.
Transitional life writing: Frank O'Connor and the autobiographical
tradition Muireann Leech; 7. Somehow it is not the same: Irish theatre and
transition Chris Morash; 8. Samuel Beckett, Flann O'Brien and the
literature of absurdity David Wheatley; Part III. Sex, Politics and
Literary Protest: 9. Censorship, law and literature Eibhear Walshe; 10.
Sex, dissent and Irish fiction: reading John McGahern Frank Shovlin; 11.
History, memory and protest in Irish theatre Emilie Pine; 12. Violence,
politics and the poetry of the troubles Rosie Lavan; Part IV. Identities
and Connections: 13. State, space and experiment in Irish language prose
writing Máirín Nic Eoin; 14. Anglo-Ireland: the big house novel in
transition Heather Ingman; 15. American-Irish literary relations Ellen
McWilliams; 16. 'Home rule in our literature': Irish-British poetic
relations Tom Walker; Part V. Retrospective Frameworks: Criticism in
Transition: 17. Literary biography in transition Paul Delaney; 18.
Publishing, Penguin and Irish writing Paul Rooney; 19. Curriculum to canon:
Irish writing and education Margaret Kelleher; 20. Critics, criticism and
the formation of an Irish literary canon Shaun Richards.