New Directions in Irish and Irish American Literature Ser.: Narratives of Class in New Irish and Scottish Literature : From Joyce to Kelman, Doyle, Galloway, and McNamee by Mary M. McGlynn (2008, Hardcover)

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About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
ISBN-100230602851
ISBN-139780230602854
eBay Product ID (ePID)60308095

Product Key Features

Number of PagesX, 236 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameNarratives of Class in New Irish and Scottish Literature : From Joyce to Kelman, Doyle, Galloway, and McNamee
SubjectEuropean / General, Modern / 20th Century, Semiotics & Theory, European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Publication Year2008
TypeTextbook
AuthorMary M. Mcglynn
Subject AreaLiterary Criticism
SeriesNew Directions in Irish and Irish American Literature Ser.
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height0.7 in
Item Weight15.5 Oz
Item Length8.3 in
Item Width5.8 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
LCCN2007-036440
Reviews"A welcome and useful study of a group of writers in need of more complex critical attention. By including both Irish and Scottish writers in the same study-and writers from both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland-McGlynn enacts the challenge to national boundaries that her study uncovers. The potential impact of such a work on Irish literary studies is especially strong; too often, Irish literature is only studied within nationalist parameters."--Lauren Onkey, Associate Professor of English, Ball State University "McGlynn's book is an excellent choice for the series New Directions in Irish and Irish American Literature, edited by Claire Culleton. It makes many important moves in this arena, not the least of which is its reconfiguration of what one might call the Celtic fringe, 'with literature as a key crossover" (Maley 205) . . . I am grateful to have this thoughtful and careful work, which in forging yet new ground in this comparative filed of Scottish-Irish studies, brings understudied authors into view and provides an important model for talking about class in contemporary literatures more generally."-- James Joyce Literary Supplement, "A welcome and useful study of a group of writers in need of more complex critical attention. By including both Irish and Scottish writers in the same study-and writers from both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland-McGlynn enacts the challenge to national boundaries that her study uncovers. The potential impact of such a work on Irish literary studies is especially strong; too often, Irish literature is only studied within nationalist parameters."--Lauren Onkey, Associate Professor of English, Ball State University, "A welcome and useful study of a group of writers in need of more complex critical attention. By including both Irish and Scottish writers in the same study-and writers from both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland-McGlynn enacts the challenge to national boundaries that her study uncovers. The potential impact of such a work on Irish literary studies is especially strong; too often, Irish literature is only studied within nationalist parameters."--Lauren Onkey, Associate Professor of English, Ball State University "McGlynn's book is an excellent choice for the series New Directions in Irish and Irish American Literature, edited by Claire Culleton.  It makes many important moves in this arena, not the least of which is its reconfiguration of what one might call the Celtic fringe, 'with literature as a key crossover" (Maley 205) . . . I am grateful to have this thoughtful and careful work, which in forging yet new ground in this comparative filed of Scottish-Irish studies, brings understudied authors into view and provides an important model for talking about class in contemporary literatures more generally."-- James Joyce Literary Supplement
Dewey Edition22
Number of Volumes1 vol.
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal863/.91409352623
Table Of ContentThe Poor Mouth * James Joyce and the Urban Periphery: Towards a Working Class Modernism * 'Make out It_s Not Unnatural at All': Janice Galloway's Mother Tongue * Barrytown Irish: Location, Language, and Class in Roddy Doyle's early novels * 'Ye_ve No to Wander:' James Kelman's Vernacular Spaces * Eoin McNamee's Local Language * The Poor Mouth Revisited
Synopsis"Narratives of Class in New Irish and Scottish Literature" argues that the outskirts of cities have become spaces for a new literature beyond boundaries of traditional notions of nation, class, and gender. These new constructions of dwellings and neighborhoods house new notions of the roles of women in the working class, a reconception paralleled by the use of the sorts of textual innovations once presumed to be the territory of metropolitan elites. Chapters on James Kelman, Roddy Doyle, Janice Galloway, and Eoin McNamee examine appropriations of voice, shifts in narrative perspective, and strategic uses of local vernacular as techniques that characterize the explosion of working-class literary production in Scotland and Ireland in the eighties and nineties., This book argues that the outskirts of cities have become spaces for a new literature beyond boundaries of traditional notions of nation, class, and gender. Includes discussions of Booker Prize winners Roddy Doyle and James Kelman.
LC Classification NumberPN849.E87-.E872
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