
Irish and Postcolonial Writing
G. Hooper(Editor)
Palgrave Macmillan (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 10. July 2002
Book
Hardback
280 pages
978-0-333-92966-7 (ISBN)
Description
Cutting across geographical boundaries, literary genres and historical periods, Irish and Postcolonial Writing examines the complex, sometimes contested legacy of Ireland's postcolonial history. From the Act of Union to the present day, these essays consider how Irish writing responded to the history of colonial contact, in what ways in drew on the experience of other cultures, and how those comparative histories were translated and utilised. Opening with a number of essays dealing with the theoretical implications of a postcolonial reading of Ireland, the book's three-part structure then presents a series of comparative essays which appraise Ireland in relation to the Caribbean, the Orient, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Nigeria, while a final section offers a number of readings of twentieth century writers. Underlining the necessity for an integration of history, theory and practice, these essays examine a range of influences and interconnections, with contributors engaging with debates within cultural and gender studies, historiography, and nationalism. A much needed response to the expanding interest in Irish and Postcolonial studies, this essay collection brings together the work of several established as well as younger scholars.
Reviews / Votes
'Irish and Postcolonial Writing is a helpful exploration of postcolonial theory.... it vindicates its utility as a critical method in Irish Studies'. - David Dwan, Queen's University, Belfast
More details
Edition
2002
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
280 p.
Dimensions
Height: 21.6 cm
Width: 13.8 cm
ISBN-13
978-0-333-92966-7 (9780333929667)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
JOSHUA ESTY Assistant Professor of English, University of Illinois
SARAH FULFORD Lecturer in Literature, University of Dundee
LYN INNES Professor of Postcolonial Literatures, University of Kent, Canterbury
DAVID JOHNSON Lecturer, Department of Literature, Open University
RICHARD KIRKLAND Lecturer, Department of English and American Studies, University of Manchester
STEVEN MATTHEWS Professor of Chair, Department of English Studies, Oxford Brookes University
TIMOTHY MCLOUGHLIN Professor of English, University of Zimbabwe, Harare
SHAKIR MUSTAFA Assistant Professor, Department of Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures, Boston University
MARIA TYMOCZKO Professor of Comparative Literature, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Content
PART I: THEORIES Introduction; G.Hooper A Diseased Propensity: Fetish and Liminality in the Irish 'Colonial' Text; C.Graham Frantz Fanon, Roger Casement and Colonial Commitment; R.Kirkland Demythologizing Ireland: Revisionism and the Irish Colonial Experience; S.Mustafa PART II: COMPARISONS Settler Instability: Edgeworth's Irish Novels and Settler Writings from Zimbabwe; T.McLoughlin Translations: Difference and Identity in Recent Poetry from Ireland and the West Indies; S.Matthews 'Monstrous Fruit': Excremental Visions in Postcolonial Irish and African Fiction; J.Esty Orientalism and Celticism; L.Innes Talking about Revolution: Lady Anne Barnard in France, Ireland, and the Cape Colony; D.Johnson PART III: READINGS 'What is my Culture? Who Talks of my Culture?:' Interrogating Irishness in the Works of James Joyce; M.Tymoczko Eavan Boland: Forging a Post-Colonial Herstory; S.Fulford Troublesome Tales: J.G.Farrell and the Decline of Empire; G.Hooper Bibliography Index