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ireland
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Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2022) 68 (3): 353–363.
Published: 01 September 2022
... extends from her family to infinity” (170). The ecological, political, aesthetic, and historical points made throughout Ireland, Literature, and the Coast sometimes get vaguely mingled in Allen’s frequent use of maritime metaphor—for example, “a study of literature and art adrift on the rushing tide...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2011) 57 (2): 224–254.
Published: 01 June 2011
...Peter C. L. Nohrnberg Copyright © Hofstra University 2011 Peter C. L. Nohrnberg
Political Economy, Tourism, and the Future
of Ireland in Joyce’s Ulysses
Peter C. L. Nohrnberg
Writing to his brother Stanislaus from Rome in November of 1906,
James Joyce expressed his belief...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2000) 46 (3): 285–310.
Published: 01 September 2000
...Karen M. Moloney Copyright © Hofstra University 2001 Molly Astray: Revisioning Ireland in
Brian Friel’s Molly Sweeney
Karen M. Moloney
n an influential review of Brian Friel’s Translations (1981), Seamus Heaney
links the character Sarah to a “symbolic...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2017) 63 (4): 451–474.
Published: 01 December 2017
..., such that her reading might be considered a fresh response to the shifty rhetoric of foreign policy and to the plight of her imaginary homeland, Eire, in particular. The essay centers on Moore’s rendering of “Spenser’s Ireland,” a lyric whose complex textual condition congealed in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2015) 61 (4): 460–483.
Published: 01 December 2015
... in A World of Love , a late modern picturesque interrupts the romantic emplotment of Ireland’s entry into global capitalist networks. Works cited Adorno Theodor . 1991 . “ On Epic Naiveté .” Notes to Literature . Vol. 1 . Translated by Nicholsen Shierry Weber . New York : Columbia...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2016) 62 (3): 247–270.
Published: 01 September 2016
... stress and of Irish neutrality. Weaving together Beckett’s intertextual relationship with Dante’s Divine Comedy , the commonplace that Emergency-era Ireland was a cultural “purgatory,” and the language of trauma studies, this essay suggests that Watt can be productively read through the paradigm...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2001) 47 (2): 137–168.
Published: 01 June 2001
..., the passage of the Government of Ireland act in 1920 and of the
Anglo-Irish treaty in 1921, and the creation of the Irish Free State in
1922—a period that, viewed from one angle, marked Ireland’s emergence
from the shadow of imperialism into the light of postcolonial indepen
dence...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2003) 49 (2): 164–192.
Published: 01 June 2003
... of Ulysses would
have derived from the comprehensive British survey of Ireland taken dur
ing the early nineteenth century and thus would have represented Ire
land through the spatial perspective of an imperial gaze. Second, while
Joyce consulted maps of Dublin during the composition of the novel...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2022) 68 (4): 467–476.
Published: 01 December 2022
... sexual abuse in a selection of twentieth- and twenty-first-century short stories and novels by some of Ireland’s most studied writers. Backus and Valente begin their preface by identifying what they see as a subgenre of modern Irish writing in which authors figure sex scandals and taboo sexuality...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2002) 48 (2): 174–190.
Published: 01 June 2002
...”
(Ellmann 13). In place of those well-thumbed tropes of British Helle
nism and Orientalism, the young poet now began to avail himself of the
rich but still largely untapped stock of legends and mythological figures
out of Ireland’s own past. Thus the gleaming visions of Greek antiquity
that had...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2008) 54 (1): 47–74.
Published: 01 March 2008
... in a way that no
other major British city is, including Glasgow. Although not identified
as a specific region in T. S. Eliot’s argument about the importance of
maintaining regional culture in the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland
nonetheless accords with his description of the region...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2017) 63 (1): 21–48.
Published: 01 March 2017
... of Ireland. Describing his visit to Connaught in 1847, for example, James Hack Tuke wrote: “Several car and coach drivers have assured me that they rarely drove anywhere without seeing dead bodies strewn along the road side, and that in the dark they had even gone over them” (quoted in Ó Murchadha 2011 , 81...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2023) 69 (3): 293–328.
Published: 01 September 2023
..., the present becomes vulnerable to the sway of givenness—the “nightmare” of “history” from which Stephen is “trying to awake” ( U 2.377). In the specific historical conditions of post-Famine Ireland, the political meaning of the nation was bound up with a complex conflict over property relations, in which...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2010) 56 (3): 318–340.
Published: 01 September 2010
... the modernity of London
and Paris to the “disturbing repose” of Protestant Ireland during the years
when De Valera’s Fianna Fail majority was constructing the nationalistic
Republic (Heat 75), we get a hint of this process. In The Heat of the Day,
Stella must return from “timeless” London to settle...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2017) 63 (2): 220–227.
Published: 01 June 2017
..., who spent much of their careers living abroad in a variety of European capitals. They nonetheless retained a certain affiliation, however conflicted or attenuated, with Ireland and its vexed history of colonial occupation, nationalist agitation, hard-won independence, and state building...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2018) 64 (2): 265–272.
Published: 01 June 2018
... of Ordnance’s survey, a project to map all of Ireland that also involved the archiving of local oral histories, receives relatively frequent scholarly attention, typically as an example of British imperial hegemony and surveillance. As Parsons demonstrates, however, there was much more to it than that. Insofar...
Journal Article
Twentieth-Century Literature (2018) 64 (3): 347–370.
Published: 01 September 2018
... upon a paradoxical construction of Scotland as both a primitive colonial hinterland and an utterly familiar, necessary component of British identity in the wake of Irish independence. Works cited Allen Nicholas . 2009 . Modernism, Ireland, and Civil War . Cambridge : Cambridge University...
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