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Terror and Irish Modernism: The Gothic Tradition from Burke to Beckett

SUNY Press

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» About this Book
    Terror and Irish Modernism
    Contents
    Acknowledgments
    1. Gothic Double Binds, Or,Irish Terrorists Confrontan Unholy Union
    2. The Wrong Marriage: Maturin and the Double Logic of Masculinity in the Unionist Gothic
    3. The Revolution Within: Wilde’s Gothic and the Confines of Convention
    4. Overcoming Allegory: Joyce’s Ulysses and the Limits of the Irish Gothic
    5. Engendering a Cartesian Gothic: Generic Form as History in Beckett’s Fiction
    EPI LOGUE: The Poetics of Fear: Gothic Inheritance at the End of Modernity
    Notes
    Bibliography
 
+
Index
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 Terror and Irish Modernism: The Gothic Tradition from Burke to Beckett
by Jim Hansen
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Bibliographic information

TitleTerror and Irish Modernism: The Gothic Tradition from Burke to Beckett
AuthorJim Hansen
PublisherSUNY Press
Publication Date9/29/09
SubjectBritish Studies,Literary Criticism,Literary History, Postcolonial Studies
Pages223


Description 

Presents a new genealogy and synoptic overview of modern Irish fiction.

Terror and Irish Modernism offers a synoptic overview of modern Irish fiction. Covering more than two centuries of literary production, Jim Hansen locates the root structure of modern Irish fiction in the masculine gender anxiety of one of the nineteenth century's most popular literary genres: the Gothic. Addressing both the decolonization of Ireland and the politics of literary form, Hansen sheds new light on canonical works by Maria Edgeworth, C. R. Maturin, Oscar Wilde, James Joyce, and Samuel Beckett by reading them all as part of the generic tradition of the Irish Gothic. He focuses in particular on how the Irish Gothic tradition translated the English Gothic's female-confinement narrative into a story about confined, feminized male protagonists. In reading this male gender-disorientation as the foundational condition of modern Irish political identity, Terror and Irish Modernism provides a thoroughly new genealogy of modern Irish fiction.



About the Author 

Jim Hansen ---

Jim Hansen is Assistant Professor of English and Critical Theory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.




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