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"Once considered a classic English writer, Jonathan Swift has in recent years been increasingly read and understood as one of the major figures of Irish - as well as world - literature. To have so substantial a selection of his writings on Ireland and Irish affairs, in prose and verse, intelligently assembled, concisely introduced, and helpfully annotated by two distinguished Swift scholars will prove a considerable boon to students and teachers of Irish writing, postcolonial studies, and English literature alike." - Ian Campbell Ross, Professor of Eighteenth-Century Studies, Trinity College Dublin
"This splendid volume represents the culmination of the work of an entire generation of Swift scholars, led by the two editors, to re-locate Swift in the Irish world in which he lived and worked for the vast majority of his politically-charged life. It brings together, in ways that no previous work does, a vast range of writings on Irish subjects, from pamphlets to broadsides, economic writings, sermons and poems that show Swift's deep involvement with eighteenth-century Ireland's colonial condition and the human consequences it brought. The introduction and notes manage to contribute an understanding of Swift and his world to both specialists and general readers, alike. This book should be required reading for anyone with an interest in Swift and eighteenth-century Ireland." - Christopher Fox, Professor and Director, Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish Studies, University of Notre Dame