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A Cry Of Wind Through A Ruined House: Trauma And The Contemporary Troubles Novel In Northern IrelandJanuary 2016 (has links)
Aleksandra Hajduczek
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Dubliners and the Joycean epiphanyBriggs, Roger T. 05 1900 (has links)
"May 2006." / Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, Dept. of English. / "May 2006." / Includes bibliographic references (leaves 36-39)
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Ženy v románech Kate O'Brien / Another Way Out: Women in Kate O'Brien's FictionHomolková, Šárka January 2013 (has links)
Kate O'Brien was one of Ireland's best female writers; moreover, she was one of the first to centre on the Catholic Middle Class in her writing, as this class was long neglected. O'Brien was famous for her women-oriented books in which she portrayed the lives of women of the rising bourgeoisie of Ireland at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth century. We can trace a certain development in O'Brien's writing, throughout her career she becomes more radical and comes to voice feminist notions about women being equal to men as well women's seeking independence from the world dominated by men. Most of her novels are family-oriented and may be called Bildungsromans as the protagonists, which apart from two books are all female, develop and grow to maturity and learn to understand the world and their place in it. As this thesis examined how the women in O'Brien's novels reflect the situation of women in her home country, it is apparent that throughout her life the writer became more radical and sceptical towards the fate of women in Ireland. Therefore, in her first written pieces she portrays women in their traditional roles as dutiful wives, daughters, or mothers. It is only in her later writing that the women manage to emancipate themselves and lead their lives independently. In O'Brien's first two...
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Cultural memory and myth in Seamus Heaney's bog poems, and Antjie Krog's Country of my skull and Down to my last skin.Dix, Brett Gavin. January 2007 (has links)
This dissertation attempts to compare and contrast the functions of cultural memory and myth in both Heaney and Krog's work. By doing so, I look at what it means for both writers to work within a culture or tradition, and how they both mediate their religious or racial identity within a fractured and divided society. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2007.
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John Millington Synge's work as a contribution to Irish folk-lore and to the psychology of primitive tribesFrenzel, Herbert. January 1932 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Bonn. / "Mit Genehmigung ... erfolgt die Drucklegung der Dissertation in englischer Sprache. Ein Auszug der Arbeit in deutscher Sprache soll in einer anglistischen Zeitschrift zum Abdruck kommen."
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"Strangers in the house": twentieth century revisions of Irish literary and cultural identity / Twentieth century revisions of Irish literary and cultural identityHynes, Colleen Anne, 1978- 28 August 2008 (has links)
This thesis, Strangers in the House, illuminates how "strangers in the house"--unconventional women, Travellers, emigrants and immigrants--have made significant contributions to the evolving traditions of Irish literature and culture. I trace the literary and creative contributions of groups that were silenced during the early twentieth-century nation-building project to review the impact of the Irish Revival, from the politics of Arthur Griffith and Eamon de Valera to the writings of Yeats, Gregory and Synge, on the establishment of an "authentic" Irish identity. I draw on scholarship that establishes Ireland as a postcolonial nation, suggesting that contemporary identity is closely linked to the national, religious and gender expectations reinforced during the periods of colonialism and decolonization. My scholarship considers individuals who continue to be peripheral in the "reimagining" of what it means to be Irish in a post-Celtic Tiger, E.U. Ireland.
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Representing the Irish body in England and France : the crisis of pauperism rebellion and international exchange, 1844-1855Mewburn, Charity 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the representation of Ireland in images and texts
produced in Britain and France between 1839 and 1855. I argue that in this period,
Ireland functioned as a crucial site for the negotiation and transformation of the
relationship between the two nations. Chapter One examines a popular middle-class
British publication of 1845, Maxwell's History of the Irish Rebellion of 1798.. .and
Emmett's Insurrection. Through an analysis of George Cruikshank's illustrations to
this work, I explore the ways that a predominant image of the Irish was linked to
British anxieties concerning a potential political alliance between the French and the
Irish based on what was represented as a "natural" religio-racial connection between
the two nations. Developing this transnational focus, I argue that French concern with
Ireland exacerbated such constructions. Chapter Two examines liberal and leftleaning
French publications that took up representations of the Irish between 1839 to
1846 in order to critique Britain's role as a modern industrial nation. In Chapter
Three I analyze how "Irishness" in the French press between 1845 and 1847, and in
satires by artists like Cham and Paul Gavarni, served both as a warning against
French adoption of the English economic model of laissez-faire capitalism, and as a
commentary on domestic working class poverty. Chapter Four explores how the Irish
were taken up both visually and textually in the French press to be momentarily
transformed into active agents of radical change in the year of France's revolution of
1848. My final chapter concludes with an analysis of French artist Gustave Courbet's
figure of an Irishwoman as a complex marker of both pauperism and potential
revolution in a contentious painting displayed strategically outside Paris' 1855
Exposition universelle. In the course of this analysis "Ireland" is shown to raise a
range of issues concerning relations between France and Britain. While images of
Irishness evoked the mobility and exchange that characterized an early moment of
free trade, those same images could simultaneously arouse anxieties in both Britain
and France around industrialization, the "advancement" of civil liberties, the growing
pauperization of populations, and the threat to both nations of calls for republican
reform. / Arts, Faculty of / Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of / Graduate
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Cultural nationalism and colonialism in nineteenth-century Irish horror fictionGlisson, Silas Nease 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis will explore how writers of nineteenth-century Irish horror fiction,
namely short stories and novels, used their works to express the social, cultural, and political
events of the period. My thesis will employ a New Historicist approach to discuss the effects
of colonialism on the writings, as well as archetypal criticism to analyse the mythic origins of
the relevant metaphors. The structuralism of Tzvetan Todorov will be used to discuss the
notion of the works' appeal as supernatural or possibly realistic works. The theory of
Mikhail Bakhtin is used to discuss the writers' linguistic choices because such theory focuses
on how language can lead to conflicts amongst social groups.
The introduction is followed by Chapter One, "Ireland as England's Fantasy." This
chapter discusses Ireland's literary stereotype as a fantasyland. The chapter also gives an
overview of Ireland's history of occupation and then contrasts the bucolic, magical Ireland of
fiction and the bleak social conditions of much of nineteenth-century Ireland.
Chapter Two, "Mythic Origins", analyses the use of myth in nineteenth-century horror
stories. The chapter discusses the merging of Christianity and Celtic myth; I then discuss the
early Irish belief in evil spirits in myths that eventually inspired horror literature.
Chapter Three, "Church versus Big House, Unionist versus Nationalist," analyses
how the conflicts of Church/Irish Catholicism vs. Big House/Anglo-Irish landlordism, proBritish
Unionist vs. pro-Irish Nationalist are manifested in the tales. In this chapter, I argue
that many Anglo-Irish writers present stern anti-Catholic attitudes, while both Anglo-Irish
and Catholic writers use the genre as political propaganda. Yet the authors tend to display
Home Rule or anti-Home Rule attitudes rather than religious loyalties in their stories.
The final chapter of the thesis, "A Heteroglossia of British and Irish Linguistic and
Literary Forms," deals with the use of language and national literary styles in Irish literature
of this period. I discuss Bakhtin's notion of heteroglossia and its applications to the Irish
novel; such a discussion because nineteenth-century Ireland was linguistically Balkanised,
with Irish Gaelic, Hibemo-English, and British English all in use. This chapter is followed by
a conclusion. / English / M. Lit. et Phil. (English)
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Mise Eire : national and personal identity in two recent Irish memoirs.Stobie, Melissa Lauren. January 2001 (has links)
Chapter One will outline the way I will be using the constructs of "national" and "personal"
identity, and will then move on to provide a brief contextual setting for the creation and
importance of certain literary conventions of Irish topography and character, in particular by
examining the cultural nationalism in Yeats's poems. In doing so, I will outline the metaphor
of evolution which is crucial in this dissertation, and will examine some of the ethical
implications of employing this metaphor. Chapter Two will examine the 1996 memoir
Angela's Ashes by Frank McCourt, outline McCourt's employment of various stock Irish
tropes, and show how this leads to a conflation of "personal" and "national" identity, to the
detriment of the memoir. Chapter Three will turn to critique Are You Somebody?, the
memoir by Nuala O'Faolain which was also published in 1996. I will argue that, in contrast
to Angela 's Ashes, Are You Somebody? offers a constructive fusion of both kinds of identity national
and personal. In Chapter Four, I will compare and contrast key issues in the texts, in
relation to their both being memoirs of (Irish) national significance, published at the same
time in a changing Ireland, and I will conclude by arguing that the process of invention which
is necessary for the writing of a memoir is equally necessary for the creation of a national
identity. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2001.
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Not-the-Troubles : an anthropological analysis of stories of quotidian life in BelfastLane, Karen January 2018 (has links)
To understand the complexity of life in a city one needs to consider a spectrum of experience. Belfast has a history of conflict and division, particularly in relation to the Troubles, reflected in comprehensive academic studies of how this has affected, and continues to affect, the citizens. But this is a particular mode of representation, a vision of life echoed in fictional literature. People's quotidian lives can and do transcend the grand narratives of the Troubles that have come to dominate these discourses. Anthropology has traditionally accorded less epistemological weight to fleeting and superficial encounters with strangers, but this mode of sociality is a central feature of life in the city. The modern stranger navigates these relationships with relative ease. Communicating with others through narrative – personal stories about our lives – is fundamental to what it is to be human, putting storytelling at the heart of anthropological study. Engagements with strangers may be brief encounters or build into acquaintanceship, but these superficial relationships are not trivial. How we interact with strangers – our public presentation of the self to others through the personal stories we share – can give glimpses into the private lives of individuals. Listening to stories of quotidian life in Belfast demonstrates a range of people's existential dilemmas and joys that challenges Troubled representations of life in the city. The complexity, size and anonymity of the city means the anthropologist needs different ways of reaching people; this thesis is as much about exploring certain anthropological methodologies as it is about people and a place. Through methods of walking, performance, human-animal interactions, my body as a research subject, and using fictional literature as ethnographic data, I interrogate the close relationship between method, data and analysis, and of knowledge-production and knowledge-dissemination. I present quotidian narratives of Belfast's citizens that are Not-the-Troubles.
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