peer-reviewedThe name of George Egerton (Mary Chavelita Dunne Bright) (1859–1945) became practically synonymous with decadence when Elkin Mathews and John Lane’s partnership, the Bodley Head, published her sexually bold first collection of short stories, Keynotes (1893). Yet this Irish writer, whose work reflects her life on three different continents, is not usually credited with making innovations in migrant fiction.Publishedpeer-reviewe
This thesis explores the relationship between fin-de-siècle anti-emigration propaganda and fiction w...
The title of Gerald Dawe’s new collection of essays on modern Irish writing is taken from Hugo Hamil...
Irish novelist Edna O’Brien suffered a tumultuous early reception; her first six novels were banned ...
George Egerton (Mary Chavelita Dunne, 1859–1945), from Co. Laois, was the New Woman author most clos...
peer-reviewedIN TANDEM WITH the stirrings of first-wave feminism, the literary work of "New Woman"l...
peer-reviewedMonique Wittig, addressing ideological activism and social change at the end of the tw...
peer-reviewedOver the past ten years, a number of major scholarly projects based in Ireland have sou...
The last decade of the 19th century was a period of great cultural changes in Britain, and especiall...
peer-reviewedThis thesis focuses on the life and literary works of Irish author Mary Anne Sadlier (...
'Because she was a girl': Gender identity and the postcolonial in James Joyce's 'Eveline'Ye
Tina O’Toole’s The Irish New Woman attends to an obscured issue in the field of New Woman studies, n...
She wrote with a passion for perfection. (p. 1) The recent decade in Irish literature has been marke...
This essay combines a stylistic analysis of the first part of Maria Edgeworth's Letters for Literary...
The article reviews the book Anglo-Irish Autobiography: Class, Gender, and the Forms of Narrative, ...
The theme of this book is cultural encounter and exchange in Irish women’s lives. Using three case s...
This thesis explores the relationship between fin-de-siècle anti-emigration propaganda and fiction w...
The title of Gerald Dawe’s new collection of essays on modern Irish writing is taken from Hugo Hamil...
Irish novelist Edna O’Brien suffered a tumultuous early reception; her first six novels were banned ...
George Egerton (Mary Chavelita Dunne, 1859–1945), from Co. Laois, was the New Woman author most clos...
peer-reviewedIN TANDEM WITH the stirrings of first-wave feminism, the literary work of "New Woman"l...
peer-reviewedMonique Wittig, addressing ideological activism and social change at the end of the tw...
peer-reviewedOver the past ten years, a number of major scholarly projects based in Ireland have sou...
The last decade of the 19th century was a period of great cultural changes in Britain, and especiall...
peer-reviewedThis thesis focuses on the life and literary works of Irish author Mary Anne Sadlier (...
'Because she was a girl': Gender identity and the postcolonial in James Joyce's 'Eveline'Ye
Tina O’Toole’s The Irish New Woman attends to an obscured issue in the field of New Woman studies, n...
She wrote with a passion for perfection. (p. 1) The recent decade in Irish literature has been marke...
This essay combines a stylistic analysis of the first part of Maria Edgeworth's Letters for Literary...
The article reviews the book Anglo-Irish Autobiography: Class, Gender, and the Forms of Narrative, ...
The theme of this book is cultural encounter and exchange in Irish women’s lives. Using three case s...
This thesis explores the relationship between fin-de-siècle anti-emigration propaganda and fiction w...
The title of Gerald Dawe’s new collection of essays on modern Irish writing is taken from Hugo Hamil...
Irish novelist Edna O’Brien suffered a tumultuous early reception; her first six novels were banned ...