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Farming In Modern Irish Literature Nicholas Grene

  • SKU: BELL-37599504
Farming In Modern Irish Literature Nicholas Grene
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Farming In Modern Irish Literature Nicholas Grene instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 9.83 MB
Pages: 256
Author: Nicholas Grene
ISBN: 9780198861294, 019886129X
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Farming In Modern Irish Literature Nicholas Grene by Nicholas Grene 9780198861294, 019886129X instant download after payment.

This innovative study analyzes the range of representation of farming in Irish literature in the period since independence/partition in 1922, as Ireland moved from a largely agricultural to a developed urban society. In many different forms including poetry, drama, fiction, and autobiography,
writers have made literary capital by looking back at their rural backgrounds, even where those may be a generation back. The first five chapters examine some of the key themes: the impact of inheritance on family in the patriarchal system where there could only be one male heir; the struggles for
survival in the poorest regions of the West of Ireland; the uses of childhood farming memories whether idyllic or traumatic; and the representation of communities, challenging the homogeneous idealizing images of the Literary Revival; the impact of modernization on successive generations into the
twenty-first century. The final three chapters are devoted to three major writers in whose work farming is central: Patrick Kavanagh, the small farmer who had to find an individual voice to express his own unique experience; John McGahern in whose fiction the life of the farm is always posited as
alternative to a rootless urban milieu; and Seamus Heaney who re-imagined his farming childhood in so many different modes throughout his career. Farming in Modern Irish Literature yields original insights into the literary iconography of rural Ireland and its interplay with social and cultural
history, opening up fresh vistas on the achievements of Irish writers in different genres, styles, and historical eras.

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