Ireland, West to East: Reimagining Ireland, cartea 52
Editat de Aidan O'Malley, Eve Pattenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 dec 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783034309134
ISBN-10: 3034309139
Pagini: 297
Ilustrații: ill. b/w
Dimensiuni: 150 x 224 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der W
Seria Reimagining Ireland
ISBN-10: 3034309139
Pagini: 297
Ilustrații: ill. b/w
Dimensiuni: 150 x 224 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der W
Seria Reimagining Ireland
Notă biografică
Aidan O'Malley teaches at the University of Rijeka and at the University of Zagreb, where he is establishing a Centre for Irish Studies. The author of Field Day and the Translation of Irish Identities: Performing Contradictions (2011), he has also published articles and chapters on contemporary Irish literature and cultural translation. He has also edited a special issue of the European Journal of English Studies, 'Myths of Europe: East of Venice', that examines literary and cultural interactions between Central and Eastern Europe and the Anglophone world in the post-Cold War period. Eve Patten is Associate Professor of English and Head of School at Trinity College Dublin. She graduated from Oxford and completed her PhD at Trinity, then held a two-year Junior Fellowship at the Institute of Irish Studies in Queen's University Belfast. She worked for several years for the British Council in Eastern Europe before returning to Trinity as a lecturer in 1996. She teaches nineteenth- and twentieth-century British and Irish writing, specializing in modern and contemporary Irish fiction in English and the literature of the Second World War. Her most recent publication is Imperial Refugee: Olivia Manning's Fictions of War (2012).
Cuprins
Contents: Eve Patten/Aidan O'Malley: Introduction: Ireland: West to East - Barra Ó Seaghdha: A Journey Eastward: Reframing the History of Irish Classical Music - Lili Zách: Ireland, Czechoslovakia and the Question of Small Nations in the Context of Ireland's Wartime Neutrality - Natalie Wynn: Irish-Jewish Constructs of Tsarist Eastern Europe - Philip Coleman: Writing Between: Hungarian Affinities in Contemporary Irish Poetry - Guy Woodward: 'We must know more than Ireland': John Hewitt and Eastern Europe - Borislav Knezevic: An Exceptional Common Culture: Postcolonial Nostalgia and Ulysses - Tatjana Jukic: Between Auschwitz and Siberia: James Joyce, Danilo Kis and a Zoning of Totalitarianism - Vital Voranau: Beckett Country: Irish Motifs in a Belarusian Landscape - Aidan O'Malley: Hubert Butler 'In Europe's Debatable Lands' - Michael McAteer: From Ireland to Croatia: Hubert Butler and Alojzije Stepinac - Stipe Grgas: Hubert Butler's Non-Presence in Croatia - John McCourt: Eastern European Images in the Irish Novel from Charles Lever to Colum McCann - Aisling McKeown: 'A distraction in other people's worlds' or 'an insider taking action'? The Representation of the Eastern European Male Migrant in Chris Binchy's Open-handed and Hugo Hamilton's Hand in the Fire - Mária Kurdi: Hungarian Migration to Ireland after the 1956 Revolution: Mark Collins's Novel Stateless in the Celtic Tiger Context - Eglantina Remport: 'History repeating': From Belfast to Budapest in Glenn Patterson's Number 5.