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Race, Violence, and Form: Reframing Nineteenth-Century Ireland

Mary L Mullen editor Renée Fox editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Liverpool University Press

Publishing:28th Mar '26

£120.00

This title is due to be published on 28th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Race, Violence, and Form: Reframing Nineteenth-Century Ireland cover

Irish literary studies has long subordinated the nineteenth century to the experimental triumphs of Irish modernism, variously dismissing its achievements as too indebted to British forms to be truly Irish, too transparently rooted in Irish history and politics to be globally or universally relevant, and too aesthetically weak to be worth close formal analysis. Race, Violence, and Form: Reframing Nineteenth-Century Ireland challenges these critical orthodoxies, employing new methodological frameworks that expand how we understand the global, racial, formal, periodized, and political scope of nineteenth-century Irish literature. The essays in the collection move fluidly between history and form, archive and imagination, past and present, and Ireland and elsewhere as they reexamine the genres of nineteenth-century Ireland, coin new aesthetic categories, and theorize Ireland’s mobile place in world networks. Focusing as much on how literary criticism has marginalized and delimited nineteenth-century Irish literature as on the new, more expansive literary and cultural histories that this literature catalyzes, the collection argues that the project of re-reading nineteenth-century Ireland challenges accepted methodologies, imperial hierarchies, and narratives of exceptionalism whose reach extends far beyond Ireland itself. Race, Violence, and Form thus not only offers exciting new directions for Irish studies scholarship, but also models an approach to nineteenth-century literary studies that de-emphasizes insularity in favor of global, collaborative, and open-ended imagining.

'This collection exemplifies the combination of consistency across the whole with range and diversity of approach and materials. It demonstrates how dislodging the Irish novel (and Irish culture and history) from the comparative frame that has been dominated by its relation to English examples proves to be highly productive of new understandings of the genre and of its specifically Irish version’s capacity to circulate and find reception in a global context. Accordingly, it should make a highly valued contribution to the field and represent one of those collections that becomes a touchstone for future critical thinking.' David Lloyd, Distinguished Professor of English, University of California, Riverside

ISBN: 9781836240310

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

272 pages