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El. knyga: Emergency Writing: Irish Literature, Neutrality, and the Second World War

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Taking seriously Ireland’s euphemism for World War II, “the Emergency,” Anna Teekell’s Emergency Writing asks both what happens to literature written during a state of emergency and what it means for writing to be a response to an emergency.
 
Anchored in close textual analysis of works by Samuel Beckett, Elizabeth Bowen, Flann O’Brien, Louis MacNeice, Denis Devlin, and Patrick Kavanagh, and supported by archival material and historical research, Emergency Writing shows how Irish late modernism was a response to the sociopolitical conditions of a newly independent Irish Free State and to a fully emerged modernism in literature and art. What emerges in Irish writing in the wake of Independence, of the Gaelic Revival, of Yeats and of Joyce, is a body of work that invokes modernism as a set of discursive practices with which to counter the Free State’s political pieties.
 
Emergency Writing provides a new approach to literary modernism and to the literature of conflict, considering the ethical dilemma of performing neutrality—emotionally, politically, and rhetorically—in a world at war.



Anna Teekell’s Emergency Writing examines the responses of Irish writers to World War II, demonstrating how Irish late modernism emerged with the Free State’s political independence. Key writers studied include Beckett, Bowen, MacNeice, and O’Brien.

Recenzijos

An engaged reading of the politics of language use in Ireland during World War II, Emergency Writing demonstrates how the war years mark a particular moment of emergence in post-independence Irish writing, as the legacy of literary modernism comes to empower diverse stylistic challenges to official narratives of Irish identity."" - Damien Keane, author of Ireland and the Problem of Information

Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(18)
Chapter 1 The Rhetoric of Irish Neutrality
19(34)
Chapter 2 Pilgrimage as Poetic Form: Kavanagh and Devlin at Lough Derg
53(36)
Chapter 3 The Enemy Within: Louis MacNeice's War Poetry
89(38)
Chapter 4 Careful Talk: Elizabeth Bowen and Language at War
127(32)
Chapter 5 Unreadable Books, Unspeakable Worlds: Beckett and O'Brien in Purgatory
159(46)
Epilogue: The Emergency's Improbable Frequency 205(14)
Notes 219(34)
Index 253
Anna Teekell is an assistant professor of English at Christopher Newport University.