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Irish Expatriate Novel in Late Capitalist Globalization [Kõva köide]

(Yale University, Connecticut)
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This study of contemporary Irish expatriate fiction offers a boldly original world-facing rather than nation-focused overview of the contemporary Irish novel. Chapters examine how Irish narrative deals with the United States in a time of declining global hegemony, a rising China and Asia, a thwarted and turbulent Global South, and a European Union that has decisively reshaped Ireland in the last half century. The author argues that in a late capitalist world defined by volatile economic and cultural globalizations, the Irish novel is struggling to imagine new ways to narrate the country's relationship to the world capitalist system and to find new place for Irish writing in the world literary system. Looking at a rapidly-changing Ireland in a rapidly-changing international order, Joe Cleary offers new readings of novels by Colm Tóibín, Anne Enright, Joseph O'Neill, Deirdre Madden, Mary Costello, Naoise Dolan, Aidan Higgins, Colum McCann, Ronan Sheehan and Ronan Bennett.

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' an essential account of how and why we have arrived where we are.' Matthew Eatough, LA Review of Books 'a hugely important contribution to Irish Studies a very significant work because it establishes terms on which scholars of the contemporary Irish novel will need to engage. It also lays the foundations for those engagements by providing a foundational theoretical framework; indeed, for such scholars, this book will be indispensable.' Eoghan Smith, Irish Studies Review 'The Irish Expatriate Novel in Late Capitalist Globalization is a very significant work because it establishes terms on which scholars of the contemporary Irish novel will need to engage. It also lays the foundations for those engagements by providing a foundational theoretical framework; indeed, for such scholars, this book will be indispensable.' Eoghan Smith

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The first monograph-length study of Irish expatriate fiction in an era of transition from American to East Asian global hegemony.
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction: Revaluations of Irish Expatriate Fiction 1(28)
Continents and Contours of Contemporary Irish Expatriate Fiction
1(10)
World Systems, World Literary Systems: Irish Literary Expatriation's Changing Historical Contexts and Meanings
11(18)
1 After America: The Irish Transatlantic Novel in `the Program Era'
29(55)
Into the West: Imagining the United States in Contemporary Irish Fiction
29(8)
Bookkeeping in Brooklyn: Colm Toibi'n's International Theme
37(13)
Unreal Cities, Falling Towers, Reminiscent Bells: Joseph O'Neill's Netherland
50(16)
Only Connect? Colum McCann's TransAtlantic
66(11)
Aftermaths
77(7)
2 Between Byzantium and Beijing: Asia from the Celtic to the American Twilight
84(47)
`They're Just Getting Up in China Now'
84(8)
`If We Go to School in Asia': Lafcadio Hearn and W. B. Yeats on European Modernity and Asian Catastrophe
92(15)
Sheehan's Statues: Victorian Epics of Conquest and Late Imperial Styles in Ronan Sheehan's Foley's Asia
107(9)
Staying Together and Breaking Up: Naoise Dolan's Exciting Times
116(13)
Asia Major, Europe Minor?
129(2)
3 Monstrous Modernity of the Global South
131(39)
Alternative Modernities or Modernity without Alternatives?
131(6)
`Nothing Can Be Fixed, it is Always the End': Ronan Bennett's The Catastrophist
137(18)
`A Countess - On Credit': Anne Enright's The Pleasure of Eliza Lynch
155(12)
L'Homme Plume, La Femme Plume
167(3)
4 Elusive Europes: New Futures, Old Traumas?
170(34)
Euro-American-Irish Triangles
170(6)
Rutted in Old Forms: Aidan Higgins's Balcony of Europe
176(12)
`The Memory of Home': Deirdre Madden's Remembering Light and Stone
188(14)
Unhappy and At Home: New Europes, Old Traumas?
202(2)
Conclusion: The Weight of the World 204(14)
Notes 218(20)
Index 238
Joe Cleary is Professor of English at Yale University. He is the author of Modernism, Empire, World Literature (2021), Outrageous Fortune: Capital and Culture in Modern Ireland, (2007) and Literature, Partition and the Nation-State: Culture and Conflict in Ireland, Israel and Palestine (2001). He is also the volume editor of The Cambridge Companion to Irish Modernism (2014) and co-edited The Cambridge Companion to Modern Irish Culture (2005).