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Parallel Visions, Confluent Worlds - Five Comparative Postcolonial Studies of Caribbean and Irish Novels in English, 1925-1965 (Paperback)
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Parallel Visions, Confluent Worlds - Five Comparative Postcolonial Studies of Caribbean and Irish Novels in English, 1925-1965 (Paperback)
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Total price: R850
Discovery Miles: 8 500
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The Republic of Ireland left the British Commonwealth in 1949. It
was traditionally overlooked by developing trends of Commonwealth
literary studies from the 1960s, which tended to examine the
cultural production of countries still under Commonwealth rule.
From the late 1960s onwards, however, scholars of Irish literature
and indeed across postcolonial studies have examined Ireland's
unique and comparative literary, historical, cultural and
geographical features in relation to the contexts of broader
postcolonial debates. To date, nonetheless, there has yet to be a
dedicated comparative study of how the specific genre of the Irish
novel developed throughout the twentieth century as a means of
giving imaginative expression to particular decolonizing processes
in Ireland as it disengaged from the dominant discourses of British
colonial rule. Ireland's history is clearly different from that of
the former colonies of the British West Indies. Richard McGuire
takes this point into account, and in Parallel Visions, Confluent
Worlds he investigates how extensively the Irish novel,
particularly from the 1920s, expresses forms and themes recognized
by many scholars and critics to be key postcolonial concerns in
West Indian novels of the same period. The British West Indies
serves as a strong suitable comparative case for examination, since
it has such an established wealth of study in relation to its
postcolonial dimensions. This book compares five pairings of Irish
and Caribbean texts that explore issues such as evolving
representations of "native" peoples, late-colonial anxiety, the
subversive power of women in a patriarchal-imperialist society.
Migration, and the experience of growing up amid anti-colonial
violence.
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