Modern Irish literature : sources and founders

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Modern Irish literature : sources and founders

Vivian Mercier ; edited and presented by Eilís Dillon

Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1994

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [355]-360) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Modern Irish Literature: Sources and Founders marks the culmination of the lifetime interest of the distinguished scholar Vivian Mercier (1919-89) in the influence of Gaelic literature on modern Irish writing. Building on the insights developed in his classic The Irish Comic Tradition, in which he traced the continuity of attitudes and subjects of Irish writers from pre-Christian times to the present, Professor Mercier's focus here is on the research of nineteenth-century scholars which gave rise to the revival of Irish literature in English. Separate chapters analysing the work of writers including Bernard Shaw, Yeats, Synge, Joyce, and Beckett build to provide a fresh and timely picture of Irish literary tradition. Informed by a wealth and diversity of scholarship, and written in a highly accessible style, this book stands as a memorial to the achievement of Vivian Mercier and as an important contribution to the study of Irish literature.

Table of Contents

  • The rediscovery of the Gaelic past
  • Irish writers and English readers - literature and politics 1798-1845
  • evangelical revival in the Church of Ireland 1800-1869
  • the revival begins
  • Bernard Shaw - Irish international
  • W.B. Yeats - master craftsman
  • John Millington Synge - devil or saint?
  • James Joyce - creating Ulysses
  • "All That Fall" - Samuel Beckett and the Bible
  • European-Irish literary connections in the 20th century. Appendix: published works of Vivian Mercier.

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