Literature and NationalismVincent Newey, Ann Thompson Liverpool University Press, 1991 - 286 sider This collection of essays traces the representation of nationalism in a number of literary texts, ranging from the poems of Sir Thomas Wyatt written at the court of Henry VIII to the plays of Tom Murphy written in Ireland in the 1980s. These essays have been conceived in honor of Philip Edwards, whose "Threshold of a Nation: Studies in English and Irish Drama" (1979) explored the inter-relations between ideas of drama and ideas of nationhood or national identity in the age of Shakespeare and in the age of Yeats. They focus mainly on these two periods and on the troubled interaction between English and Irish nationalism, but Cowper, Coleridge, Byron and Strindberg are also featured. The writers discussed, whether they are ostensibly celebrating the innocent early days of English imperialism, reacting to the French Revolution and the rise and fall of Napoleon, or doggedly rewriting the story of "National Question" in Ireland, include those who are attracted by the glamour of nationalism and eager to participate in its rhetoric as well as those who are sceptical, cynical, even hostile. Nationalism can enter literature as panegyric or elegy, tragedy or farce. |
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Side 46
... figure , or to Shakespeare's representation of this classical figure ; for Hamlet and the fictional Brutus both play the part of the intellectual as well - intentioned assassin . In both Julius Caesar and Hamlet , a bookish , reflective ...
... figure , or to Shakespeare's representation of this classical figure ; for Hamlet and the fictional Brutus both play the part of the intellectual as well - intentioned assassin . In both Julius Caesar and Hamlet , a bookish , reflective ...
Side 183
... figure from Irish legend , Cuchulain , a figure that accompanies his creative life from beginning to end in a peculiarly obsessive way , the knot is most closely tied . This , as I hope to show , is because for Yeats it was in ...
... figure from Irish legend , Cuchulain , a figure that accompanies his creative life from beginning to end in a peculiarly obsessive way , the knot is most closely tied . This , as I hope to show , is because for Yeats it was in ...
Side 186
... figure from which Shakespeare's metaphor is derived wonderfully enlivens and illuminates Hamlet's soliloquy . But the convergence of Shakespeare's implied figure , drawn from Celtic legend , with Yeats's repre- sented figure , drawn ...
... figure from which Shakespeare's metaphor is derived wonderfully enlivens and illuminates Hamlet's soliloquy . But the convergence of Shakespeare's implied figure , drawn from Celtic legend , with Yeats's repre- sented figure , drawn ...
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War Civil War and Bruderkrieg in Shakespeare | 11 |
Antique Romans and Modern Danes in Julius Caesar and Hamlet | 41 |
Shakespeares Macbeth and the Question of Nationalism | 56 |
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aesthetic Anglo-Irish Anthill antithetical Arcadia Autumn Journal Baile's Strand Bailegangaire battle Britain Brutus Byron Catholic century character church Claudius Coleridge comedy comic contemporary Cowper critical Cuchulain cultural Cymbeline Deane death drama Dublin E. R. Dodds earlier edition England English essay figure Fluellen genius Glendower Gustav Gustav III Hamlet Henry Hewitt history plays Hotspur Hubert Butler Ibid imagination Imogen Ireland Irish island James John Julius Caesar killed King King's language later leek Letters Literary London Louis MacNeice Macbeth MacNeice's metaphor Mommo murder Napoleon Nationalist Oldcastle Oxford painter patriotism Philip Edwards poem poet poetry political Posthumus Prince Prose Protestant Queen quoted reference rhetoric Richard Richard III role Roman Rome scene Scotland Seamus Deane seems Shakespeare Sidney Sidney's spirit stanza story Strindberg symbolic tells theatre thou Tom Paulin tradition W. B. Yeats Welsh William words writes wrote Yeats's