Adresse
Centre Culturel Irlandaiscontact
Vol 51 n 2 Autumn/Winter 2021 | Vol 52 n 1 Spring/Summer 2022 | Vol 52 n 2 Autumn/Winter 2022 | Vol 53 n 1 Spring/Summer 2023 | Vol 53 n 2 Autumn/Winter 2023 |
Titre : | Irish University Review : Périodique numérique et imprimé Vol 53 n 1 - Spring/Summer 2023 |
Type de document : | Bulletin |
Paru le : | 01/06/2023 |
Dépouillements
Article
Christina MORIN, Auteur ;
Ellen Scheible, Auteur
|
Article
Renée FOX, Auteur
|
This essay explores the ways Bram Stoker brings eighteenth-century affective gothic reading practices to bear on Victorian fiction’s investments in realism. By investigating modes of affective read...
Article
Edward Kearns, Auteur ;
Christina MORIN, Auteur
|
This article explores how big data – or very large collections of data that are too extensive to be evaluated in any meaningful way by conventional literary analysis – and machine learning can help...
Article
The national tales of Maria Edgeworth and Walter Scott function by enforcing the normalcy of the bounded, self-reliant body through the gothic representation of the disabled body as threatening to ...
Article
The immersive, fictional space that Irish gothicist Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu calls his reader to occupy has been underexplored in existing critical literature. This article draws on comments made by...
Article
Ed Madden, Auteur
|
Ed Madden’s contribution to this special issue is a creative response to themes of the Irish gothic, including four poems from his most recent book, A pooka in Arkansas (Word Works, 2023) and a new...
Article
This essay traces the development of gothic impulses in the art of Northern Irish visual artist Willie Doherty (b.1959, Derry), considering, briefly, the disquieting ambiguities of his early photog...
Article
‘Failed Heterotopias’ reads three contemporary postcolonial gothic novels, Anna Burns's Milkman (2019), J. M. Coetzee’s Disgrace (1999), and Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things (1997) using Mic...
Article
Kevin Barry’s short story ‘Fjord of Killary’ combines contemporary dystopian and ecological concerns, through the gothic, in order to critique Irish neoliberal ideologies. Engaging the eco-gothic, ...
Article
This essay explores the role of the sovereignty goddess in Emma Donoghue’s Hood (1995) and its protagonist’s efforts to come to terms with the death of her newly deceased girlfriend. Taking its imp...