Censorship and the Irish Writer

Politics, Polemics, and the International Dialectic

Brad Kent author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Toronto Press

Published:17th Mar '26

Should be back in stock very soon

Censorship and the Irish Writer cover

Censorship affected the careers of many Irish writers and transformed the trajectory of modern Irish literature. Although some authors were reluctant to defend themselves and their art, others strenuously fought against the curtailment of freedom of expression by lobbying politicians, writing polemics, and organising themselves into professional bodies and activist groups. Supported by archival research and informed by philosophical concerns, Censorship and the Irish Writer details almost a century of this history from an innovative perspective. Discussing writers such as AE, Lady Gregory, James Joyce, John McGahern, Edna O’Brien, Sean O’Casey, Sean O’Faolain, Bernard Shaw, and W.B. Yeats and writers’ organisations like the Irish Academy of Letters and Irish PEN, Brad Kent offers vital insight into the intersections of politics, art, and resistance.

While this book recounts spectacular controversies, it places such events in a long line of agitations for greater freedom of expression and in the context of personal lives and professional networks that straddled geopolitical borders. In so doing, Kent argues that censorship is a phenomenon that is driven by tensions not only between the competing rights of individuals and the wider community, but between the national and the international, the local and the global. The result is an original and compelling account of Irish literary history.

“In this highly valuable and timely study of censorship as an international dialectic, Brad Kent newly illuminates the experiences of censorship for Irish writers over a century of conflict and resistance. As he persuasively argues, this is a history best understood not merely as local battles or a national story but as part of a global movement for artistic integrity and freedom of expression.” - Margaret Kelleher, Chair of Anglo-Irish Literature and Drama, University College Dublin

“This is the book for which everyone concerned with the material conditions of Irish culture has been waiting. We have long understood, if only anecdotally, that censorship was instrumental in determining the direction of Irish writing for much of the twentieth century. With Brad Kent's superbly researched new book, we now understand why and how. This is scholarship that will endure.” - Chris Morash, Seamus Heaney Professor of Irish Writing, Trinity College Dublin

ISBN: 9781487567613

Dimensions: 235mm x 159mm x 29mm

Weight: 700g

416 pages