Reimagining Irish Studies for the Twenty-First Century  Paid

by Eamon Maher (Edited), Eugene O'Brien (Edited)
©2021, XXII, 362 Pages

Series: Reimagining Ireland, Volume 100

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This landmark collection marks the publication of the 100th book in the Reimagining Ireland series. It attempts to provide a «forward look» (as opposed to what Frank O’Connor once referred to as the « backward look») at what Irish Studies might look like in the third millennium. With a Foreword by Declan Kiberd, it also contains essays by several other leading Irish Studies experts on (among other areas) literature and critical theory, sport, the Irish language, food and beverage studies, cinema, women’s writing, Brexit, religion, Northern Ireland, the legacy of the Great Famine, Ireland in the French imagination, archival research, musicology, and Irish Studies in North America. The book is a tribute to Irish Studies’ foundational commitment to revealing and renewing Irishness within and beyond the national space.

CONTENTS: Eamon Maher: Introduction: Reimagining Irish Studies for the Twenty-First Century – Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire: Applying a Food Studies Perspective to Irish Studies – Barry Houlihan: Archives in Irish Studies: Locating Memory and the Archival Space – Katy Hayward: Between Britain and Europe Once More: The Significance of Brexit for the Reimagination of Ireland – Mary S. Pierse: Catching the Mood: George Moore’s Fin- de- Siècle Involvements – Brian Murphy: Drinking Spaces in Strange Places: New Directions in Irish Beverage Research – Eóin Flannery: Ecotheory and Criticism – Grace Neville: Poverty Trapped: French Traveller Accounts of Poverty in Ireland over the Centuries – Eamonn Wall: Irish Studies in North America: Reflections – Maureen O’Connor: Irish Women’s Writing – Harry White: «Monuments of Its Own Magnificence»: Musicology within Irish Studies – Elke d’Hoker: New Directions in Short Fiction – Sylvie Mikowski: No Country for Young Girls?: Representations of Gender Based Violence in Some Recent Fiction by Irish Women Writers – Colin Coulter and Peter Shirlow: Northern Ireland’s Future(s) – John Walsh: «Real» Language Policy in a Time of Crisis: Covid 19, the State and the Irish Language – Ruth Barton: Reimagining Irish Film Studies for the Twenty-First Century – Catherine Maignant: Religion in Irish Studies – Paul Rouse: Sport and the Irish – Eugene O’Brien: The Dawning of Difference: Literary and Cultural Theory in Irish Studies – Marguérite Corporaal: «The Words Will Come»: Today’s Legacies of the Great Irish Famine – Michael Cronin: Language, Time and the Improbable in Contemporary Ireland – Derek Hand: «What Would I Say, if I Had a Voice?»: The Irish Novel and the Articulation of Modernity.
Pages:
XXII, 362
Year:
2021
ISBN (PAPERBACK):
9781800791916 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9781800791930 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9781800791923 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
: Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, New York, Wien, 2021. XXII, 362 pp., 12 fig. b/w.

Eamon Maher is Director of the National Centre for Franco-Irish Studies in TU Dublin and General Editor of the Reimagining Ireland series with Peter Lang.

Eugene O’Brien is Head of the Department of English Language and Literature in Mary Immaculate College, Limerick, and Director of the MIC Institute for Irish Studies.

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