This article analyzes significant traces of the View of the Present State of Ireland in Irish novels published in the aftermath of the Act of Union of 1800. Written by Protestants, they aimed to explain the Irish problem to an English audience, and thereby foster more harmonious relations between the two islands. Spenserâ s View, which had long been a resource for antiquaries, was taken up by these novelists in a variety of ways, ranging from plundering his hostile descriptions of Gaelic Irish mores to add color and an alleged authenticity to their characters and plots, to engaging with his politics and pointing to his complicity in the colonial project in Ireland. That some novelists employed both of these approaches simultaneously shows ...
History in Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene Book V and his View of the Present State of Ireland reflec...
The aim of this thesis has been to examine Spenser s A View of the Present State of Ireland in the l...
The late 16th century is a key period when it comes to understanding why Irish people were otherized...
This article analyzes significant traces of the View of the Present State of Ireland in Irish novels...
Irish demons: English writings on Ireland, the Irish and gender by Spenser and his contemporarie
Edmund Spenser has been beleaguered by some critics who deem him to be a willing and active represen...
This article investigates the conflicted cultural identity of those Irish-speaking antiquarians work...
This essay foregrounds memory’s place in Spenser's A View of the Present State of Ireland (1596). Sp...
The first section of the View is widely understood to be influenced by the twelfth-century texts of ...
The first section of the View is widely understood to be influenced by the twelfth-century texts of ...
The 18th century was a period of great activity in the field of historical and antiquarian scholarsh...
A new project underwritten by the Irish Research Council seeks to fill in blanks in our knowledge of...
Worldmaking Spenser reexamines the role of Spenser\u27s work in English history and highlights the r...
Traditional interpretations of Spenser’s allegory, both moral and historical, have tended to identif...
IntroductionBetween 1780 and 1830, a highly distinctive body of imaginative writing emerged in Irela...
History in Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene Book V and his View of the Present State of Ireland reflec...
The aim of this thesis has been to examine Spenser s A View of the Present State of Ireland in the l...
The late 16th century is a key period when it comes to understanding why Irish people were otherized...
This article analyzes significant traces of the View of the Present State of Ireland in Irish novels...
Irish demons: English writings on Ireland, the Irish and gender by Spenser and his contemporarie
Edmund Spenser has been beleaguered by some critics who deem him to be a willing and active represen...
This article investigates the conflicted cultural identity of those Irish-speaking antiquarians work...
This essay foregrounds memory’s place in Spenser's A View of the Present State of Ireland (1596). Sp...
The first section of the View is widely understood to be influenced by the twelfth-century texts of ...
The first section of the View is widely understood to be influenced by the twelfth-century texts of ...
The 18th century was a period of great activity in the field of historical and antiquarian scholarsh...
A new project underwritten by the Irish Research Council seeks to fill in blanks in our knowledge of...
Worldmaking Spenser reexamines the role of Spenser\u27s work in English history and highlights the r...
Traditional interpretations of Spenser’s allegory, both moral and historical, have tended to identif...
IntroductionBetween 1780 and 1830, a highly distinctive body of imaginative writing emerged in Irela...
History in Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene Book V and his View of the Present State of Ireland reflec...
The aim of this thesis has been to examine Spenser s A View of the Present State of Ireland in the l...
The late 16th century is a key period when it comes to understanding why Irish people were otherized...