The Irish Literary Periodical 1923-58
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:1st Jan '04
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Frank Shovlin examines in detail six Irish literary periodicals that appeared in the first forty years after the partitioning on Ireland. The six titles are The Irish Statesman (1923-30), The Dublin Magazine (1923-58), Ireland To-Day (1936-38), The Bell (1940-54), Envoy (1949-51) and Rann (1948-53). These journals, while not the only examples of the genre in these neglected decades of Irish cultural history, make the finest and most influential contributions towards the development of a native Irish literary tradition in the earliest years of both Irish states, north and south of the border. The manner in which each of the journals was established and run is considered, with an emphasis on varying editorial personalities and their impact on each periodical. Shovlin emphasizes the common themes of literary realism, the ideological struggle between monolithic nationalism and liberal cosmopolitanism, and the importance of publishing context in the interpretation of literary works. The careers of figures such as Patrick Kavanagh, Seán O Faoláin, Liam O Flaherty and John Hewitt are re-examined in the light of their involvement with periodical publication. The author concludes with an overview of the progress of the literary periodical in Ireland in the decades after the closure of The Dublin Magazine in 1958. This book is an important contribution to recent growing scholarship on the role of literary magazines specifically and history of the book generally both in Ireland and elsewhere.
Shovlin supplies a tightly woven inner history of the period in question. * Notes and Queries - Bruce Stewart *
Frank Shovlin's packed, compelling study of little magazines ... performs an important feat of literary and historical recovery ... the book reads like an angled history of twentieth-century Ireland, and a record of how intellectuals engaged with public roles and tried to force non-aesthetic agendas onto literature and its reception ... While political contextualization of the journals restores them to the life and debates of their own time, Shovlin's book is also suggestive and insightful about the form and structure of literary journals. * Galway Arts Centre Review *
... an important contribution to the cultural history of this neglected period. * Clare Hutton, Times Literary Supplement *
ISBN: 9780199267392
Dimensions: 224mm x 146mm x 17mm
Weight: 385g
226 pages