Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction A history of the Irish novel, 1665–2010
- Interchapter 1 Virtue Rewarded; or, the Irish Princess
- Chapter 1 Beginnings and endings
- Interchapter 2 Beyond history
- Chapter 2 Speak not my name; or, the wings of Minerva
- Interchapter 3 Edith Somerville and Martin Ross's The Real Charlotte
- Chapter 3 Living in a time of epic
- Interchapter 4 James Joyce's Ulysses
- Chapter 4 Irish independence and the bureaucratic imagination, 1922–39
- Interchapter 5 Elizabeth Bowen's The Last September and the art of betrayal
- Chapter 5 Enervated island – isolated Ireland? 1940–60
- Interchapter 6 John Banville's Doctor Copernicus: a revolution in the head
- Chapter 6 The struggle of making it new, 1960–79
- Interchapter 7 Seamus Deane's Reading in the Dark and the rebel act of interpretation
- Chapter 7 Brave new worlds
- Interchapter 8 John McGahern's That They May Face the Rising Sun
- Conclusion The future of the Irish novel in the global literary marketplace
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 7 - Brave new worlds
Celtic Tigers and moving statues, 1979 to the present day
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction A history of the Irish novel, 1665–2010
- Interchapter 1 Virtue Rewarded; or, the Irish Princess
- Chapter 1 Beginnings and endings
- Interchapter 2 Beyond history
- Chapter 2 Speak not my name; or, the wings of Minerva
- Interchapter 3 Edith Somerville and Martin Ross's The Real Charlotte
- Chapter 3 Living in a time of epic
- Interchapter 4 James Joyce's Ulysses
- Chapter 4 Irish independence and the bureaucratic imagination, 1922–39
- Interchapter 5 Elizabeth Bowen's The Last September and the art of betrayal
- Chapter 5 Enervated island – isolated Ireland? 1940–60
- Interchapter 6 John Banville's Doctor Copernicus: a revolution in the head
- Chapter 6 The struggle of making it new, 1960–79
- Interchapter 7 Seamus Deane's Reading in the Dark and the rebel act of interpretation
- Chapter 7 Brave new worlds
- Interchapter 8 John McGahern's That They May Face the Rising Sun
- Conclusion The future of the Irish novel in the global literary marketplace
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
[C]onfusion is not an ignoble condition.
(Brian Friel, Translations)The last thirty years have undoubtedly been a time of rapid and concentrated transition within Irish society and culture. Every event that occurred over these years in the realm of culture, religion, politics and economics can be read as both a beginning and an end, heralding both the death of an old Ireland and the birth of the new. Certainly the language of progress and modernisation has dominated public discourse as a talisman of desire in the 1980s and the subsequent consensus that something of a break with the past, with tradition, had occurred in the 1990s: that the Irish world was now as it has never before been. Of course, the more mundane truth is that every generation, being so close to events, cannot but view its own time as a moment of profound upheaval, as entirely and painfully new: thus modern Ireland's experience has always being presented as one of transformation and transition. Nonetheless, the rapidity of this change is notable not alone as an Irish but as a global phenomenon. In Ireland, as a consequence, there persists a perverse fascination with excavating the present moment as thoroughly unique in its manifestations of uncharted confusion and trauma. As a result, not since James Joyce articulated the peculiarities of the late nineteenth-century renaissance moment as both the familiar and the foreign has the present seemed so very strange.
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- A History of the Irish Novel , pp. 254 - 283Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011