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Modernism, Ireland and Civil War

Nicholas Allen author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:2nd Jul '09

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Modernism, Ireland and Civil War cover

An important study of post-1922 Irish literature in its engagement with political and literary experiment.

In this book, Allen locates Joyce, Beckett, Jack and W. B. Yeats in the controversies surrounding the Irish state after 1922. With its interdisciplinary perspective on artists and contexts, this book is a major contribution to the study of Irish culture of the 1920s and 30s and of modernism's histories.The first two decades of Irish independence were fraught and the formation of the post-imperial state was a continual controversy. The conditional perception of what Ireland was, should, or might be coincided with a revolution in the arts. Now forgotten cultures flared and disappeared, little magazines, cabaret clubs, riots and theatres erupting in a fluctuating public sphere. Nicholas Allen reads the crisis of Irish independence as formative of newly experimental relations between novels, poems, paintings, artists and audiences. The conditional, unfinished spaces of the modernist artwork were an unfinished civil war. In connecting these texts and times, Allen locates Joyce, Beckett, Jack and W. B. Yeats in the controversies surrounding the Irish state after 1922. With its interdisciplinary perspective on artists and contexts, this book is a major contribution to the study of Irish culture of the 1920s and 30s and of modernism's histories.

ISBN: 9780521489959

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm

Weight: 520g

240 pages