Teaching John McGahern's "The Dark" provides an indispensable companion to the classic Irish novel. With an introduction aimed at first-time readers and four critical essays, this edition guides readers through the novels famously controversial history. While The Dark was initially banned in Ireland for obscenity, scholars now demonstrate that McGaherns novel of adolescence is not obscene, but revelatory, exposing the corruption underlying authority structures in mid-century Irelandfrom the family to the church, to the governments willingness to ignore national and communal trauma. The Dark is a story of alarming brutality, surprising tenderness, and poetic lyricism; a reflection of Irish society that maintains historical significance as contemporary Ireland continues to build its national identity. An invaluable resource, this edition gives students and scholars a rich source of contextualizing material to address the themes and significance of McGaherns complex novel.
Recenzijos
"Original and very much needed, given the relevance of this novel in the Irish literary canon. (Marisol Morales-Ladrón, coeditor of Deirdre Madden: New Critical Essays) This timely new edition . . . equips educators and students to understand, discuss, and address those forms of abuse that flourish under conditions of silence." Margot Gayle Backus, coeditor of The Child Sex Scandal and Modern Irish Literature: Writing the Unspeakable
Introduction: Seeing in the Dark, Anna Teekell
Essays
1. "The Four-Letter Word": Censorship and "The Dark, "Frank Shovlin
2. Documenting The Dark: John McGahern and the Archive, Barry Houlihan
3. A Very Special Violence: John McGaherns Biopolitical Novel, Enda Duffy
4. Reading Trauma in The Dark, Kathleen Costello-Sullivan
Anna Teekell is associate professor of English at Christopher Newport University.
Ellen Scheible is professor of English and director of the honors program at Bridgewater State University.