
Re-Mapping Exile
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Content
- Front Matter
- Front Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION. Re-Mapping Exile
- References
- Theorising Exile
- Meanings of exile
- Towards a sociology of exile
- Exilic writing
- Exile and modernity
- Globalisation and late modern exile
- Remembering exile: The Irish diaspora and the healing of the nation
- Notes
- References
- 'The lukewarm conviction of temporary lodgers': The Anglo-Irish and Dimensions of Exile in the Work of Hubert Butler
- References
- Exiles no More: Ethnic Leadership and the Construction of the Myth of Thomas D'Arcy McGee
- Introduction: Acculturation and ethnic leadership
- Young McGee: Romantic revolutionary
- Mature McGee: Canadian with a Celtic soul
- The Myth of McGee
- The project of Mary Anne Sadlier
- Sadlier's reading of McGee's life
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- From Reformer to Sufferer: The Returning Exile in Rosa Mulholland's Fiction
- Acknowledgement
- Notes
- References
- (Dis)Location and Its (Dis)Contents: Translation as Exile in James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Finnegans Wake
- Introduction
- Exile in Literature
- A Poetics of Translation
- Silence, exile, cunning: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
- The Babbelers with their Thangas: Finnegans Wake
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- John Hewitt at Home and in Exile
- Exile and immigration
- Exile and emigration
- 'This is my home and country .'
- Planter - native and exile
- Exile in Coventry
- The charms of exile, yet longing for home
- Exile, nationality and identity
- Dissent as exile
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- The Celtic Ray: Representations of Diaspora Identities in Van Morrison's Lyrics
- Origins and Displacements
- Irish Rover
- Glamour and the Dweller on the Threshold
- Irish Heartbeat
- The Beauty of the Days Gone By
- Notes
- References
- 'Between the Dark Shore and the Light': The Exilic Subject in Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin's The Second Voyage
- Notes
- References
- 'The culchies have fuckin' everythin': Internal Exile in Roddy Doyle's The
- References
- 'Washed up on Somebody Else's Tide': The Exile Motif in Contemporary Poetry by Women
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- John Banville's Shroud: Exile in Simulation
- Introduction
- Exiled from a History and Its Record
- Exiled from the Likeness of a Divinity
- The Exiled Subject in Shroud: 'a contingency, misplaced and adrift in time' (68-69)
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- CONTRIBUTORS
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