Book contents
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in Irish Literature and Culture
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction: A Weak Theory of Transnationalism
- Part I Transnational Genealogies
- Part II Planets
- Part III Missed Translations
- Part IV Transnational Futures
- Chapter 13 Irish Fiction, Small Presses, and the World-System
- Chapter 14 Resources and Repertoires: Language in Irish Fiction after Globalization
- Chapter 15 Roots and Crowns: Race and Hair Culture in Traveller and Black Women’s Writing
- Chapter 16 Conflict and Care: Edna O’Brien’s Girl, Colum McCann’s Apeirogon, and the Limits of Interculturality
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 16 - Conflict and Care: Edna O’Brien’s Girl, Colum McCann’s Apeirogon, and the Limits of Interculturality
from Part IV - Transnational Futures
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 November 2024
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in Irish Literature and Culture
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction: A Weak Theory of Transnationalism
- Part I Transnational Genealogies
- Part II Planets
- Part III Missed Translations
- Part IV Transnational Futures
- Chapter 13 Irish Fiction, Small Presses, and the World-System
- Chapter 14 Resources and Repertoires: Language in Irish Fiction after Globalization
- Chapter 15 Roots and Crowns: Race and Hair Culture in Traveller and Black Women’s Writing
- Chapter 16 Conflict and Care: Edna O’Brien’s Girl, Colum McCann’s Apeirogon, and the Limits of Interculturality
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter sets out to explore the potential decolonial politics at stake in two recent novels by Edna O’Brien and Colum McCann. These novels, set outside Ireland (in Palestine and Israel in the case of McCann and Nigeria in the case of O’Brien), raise uncomfortable questions about interculturality, empathy, and the notion of care. My central consideration is whether these well-meaning narratives of the fallout from violence and conflict in turn produce a form of epistemic violence which belies the poetics of care they strive so hard to foreground. Ultimately, I contend that notwithstanding these authors’ evident wish to foster empathy, their novels potentially function as aesthetic smokescreens, dissimulating structural inequalities on a local, national, and global scale, and indulging in a depoliticized form of interculturality which impedes a robust criticism of coloniality.
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- Information
- Transnationalism in Irish Literature and Culture , pp. 300 - 316Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024