Wallace Stevens and the Contemporary Irish Novel
Order, Form, and Creative Un-Doing
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:22nd Dec '23
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Wallace Stevens and the Contemporary Irish Novel is a major contribution to the study of the literary influence of the American modernist poet Wallace Stevens. Stevens’s lifelong poetic quest for order and the championing of the creative affordances of the imagination finds compelling articulation in the positioning of the Irish novel as a response to larger legacies of Anglo-American modernism, and how aesthetic re-imagining can be possible in the aftermath of the destruction of certainties and literary tradition heralded by postmodern practice and metatextual consciousness. It is this book’s argument that intertextual influences flowing from Stevens’s poetry towards the vitality of the novelistic imagination enact robust dialectical exchanges between existential chaos and artistic order, contemporary form and poetic precursors. Through readings of novels by important contemporary Irish novelists John Banville, Colum McCann, Ed O’Loughlin, Iris Murdoch, and Emma Donoghue, this book contemporizes Stevens’s literary influence with refence to novelistic style, themes, and thematic preoccupations that stake the claim for the international status of the contemporary Irish novel as it shapes a new understanding of “world literature” as exchange between national languages, cultures, and alternative formulations of aesthetic modernity as continuing project.
"Nuanced and wide-ranging, Tan’s important study is the first full-length exploration of the remarkable transatlantic and cross-generic affinity between American modernist poet Wallace Stevens and Irish novelists from John Banville and Colum McCann to Iris Murdoch and Emma Donoghue. Tan’s expert interrogation of the literary mediation of the philosophical opposition between appearance and reality reveals that in Stevens’ poetry, as in the Irish novel, ‘form is articulated under the pressure of its own unmaking’."
-- Professor Lee M. Jenkins, School of English and Digital Humanities, University College Cork
ISBN: 9781032487021
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 417g
132 pages