The Influence of Irish Folklore Upon the Work of Synge, Yeats, and Lady Gregory
Author : Leslie Gale Burgevin
Publisher :
Page : 172 pages
File Size : 16,16 MB
Release : 1916
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Leslie Gale Burgevin
Publisher :
Page : 172 pages
File Size : 16,16 MB
Release : 1916
Category :
ISBN :
Author : University of California, Berkeley
Publisher :
Page : 1118 pages
File Size : 45,42 MB
Release : 1916
Category : Universities and colleges
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher : University of Texas Press
Page : 952 pages
File Size : 21,75 MB
Release : 1976
Category : Reference
ISBN :
Author : Lady Gregory
Publisher :
Page : 348 pages
File Size : 34,42 MB
Release : 1914
Category : Authors, Irish
ISBN :
Author : A. Nicholas Fargnoli
Publisher : Literary A-Z's
Page : 326 pages
File Size : 26,96 MB
Release : 1996
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0195110293
(series copy)These encyclopedic companions are browsable, invaluable individual guides to authors and their works. Useful for students, but written with the general reader in mind, they are clear, concise, accessible, and supply the basic cultural, historical, biographical and critical information so crucial toan appreciation and enjoyment of the primary works. Each is arranged in an A-Z fashion and presents and explains the terms, people, places, and concepts encountered in the literary worlds of James Joyce, Mark Twain, and Virginia Woolf.As a keen explorer of the mundane material of everyday life, James Joyce ranks high in the canon of modernist writers. He is arguably the most influential writer of the twentieth-century, and may be the most read, studied, and taught of all modern writers. The James Joyce A-Z is the ideal companionto Joyce's life and work. Over 800 concise entries relating to all aspects of Joyce are gathered here in one easy-to-use volume of impressive scope.
Author : Deirdre Toomey
Publisher : Springer
Page : 460 pages
File Size : 29,74 MB
Release : 1997-10-13
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1349258229
Yeats and Women , published originally in the Yeats Annuals series, collects eight essays on Yeats's relationships with women, two collections of letters to him and his broadcast, 'Poems about Women'. The essays cover sexuality and its dynamic in Yeats's writing: his attitude to feminism and to the 'feminist occult'; his relationships with Maud Gonne, Dorothea Hunter, Olivia Shakespear, Florence Farr, Iseult Gonne and George Yeats. Yeats's relationship with Lady Gregory and her co-authorship of Cathleen ni Houlihan is analysed. The collection includes 12 plates.
Author : Gregory Castle
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 322 pages
File Size : 45,2 MB
Release : 2001-05-21
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1139428748
In Modernism and the Celtic Revival, Gregory Castle examines the impact of anthropology on the work of Irish Revivalists such as W. B. Yeats, John M. Synge and James Joyce. Castle argues that anthropology enabled Irish Revivalists to confront and combat British imperialism, even as these Irish writers remained ambivalently dependent on the cultural and political discourses they sought to undermine. Castle shows how Irish Modernists employed textual and rhetorical strategies first developed in anthropology to translate, reassemble and edit oral and folk-cultural material. In doing so, he claims, they confronted and undermined inherited notions of identity which Ireland, often a site of ethnographic curiosity throughout the nineteenth-century, had been subject to. Drawing on a wide range of post-colonial theory, this book should be of interest to scholars in Irish studies, post-colonial studies and Modernism.
Author : California. University
Publisher :
Page : 1122 pages
File Size : 47,78 MB
Release : 1916
Category :
ISBN :
Author : William Marion Reedy
Publisher :
Page : 782 pages
File Size : 21,36 MB
Release : 1916
Category : America
ISBN :
Author : Colm Tóibín
Publisher : Peter Lang
Page : 186 pages
File Size : 19,41 MB
Release : 2005
Category : Drama
ISBN : 9781904505143
An entertaining celebration of John Millington Synge by contemporary Irish writers