Gothic Ireland: Horror and the Irish Anglican Imagination in the Long Eighteenth CenturyFour Courts, 2005 - 240 sider This book examines the formation of Anglican identity in Ireland throughout the long, 18th century. Beginning with the 1641 Rebellion, which constitutes the inaugurating event of Anglican Ireland, the book traces the convolutions of this identity through to the Act of Union in 1801. It argues that Gothicism is the basic modality in which Anglican Ireland found expression, and traces the themes and modes of Gothic writing in political tracts, philosophical pamphlets, graveyard poetry, aesthetic treatises, and Gothic novels. In linking these diffuse modes of writing through their common recourse to a Gothic language, this book produces a psycho-history of the Anglican mind. |
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Side 31
... native Gaelic chieftains ; the ' Old English ' , the still - Catholic descen- dants of the Cambro - Normans who had invaded and taken political control of Ireland in the twelfth century with the blessing of Henry II ; and the ' new ...
... native Gaelic chieftains ; the ' Old English ' , the still - Catholic descen- dants of the Cambro - Normans who had invaded and taken political control of Ireland in the twelfth century with the blessing of Henry II ; and the ' new ...
Side 91
... native Irish remain on the planet , having already been assimilated / consumed by the English arrivals of the twelfth century : ' Now ' tis manifest that the great body of the present people of Ireland are the progeny of the English and ...
... native Irish remain on the planet , having already been assimilated / consumed by the English arrivals of the twelfth century : ' Now ' tis manifest that the great body of the present people of Ireland are the progeny of the English and ...
Side 94
... natives in Ireland from before the Norman Conquest , Molyneux in part denies the existence of native Catholics - although they must have been absorbed somehow and presumably are lurking in the blood and biology of the present ...
... natives in Ireland from before the Norman Conquest , Molyneux in part denies the existence of native Catholics - although they must have been absorbed somehow and presumably are lurking in the blood and biology of the present ...
Innhold
PREFACE | 7 |
creating the Catholic Other in Sir John Temples | 28 |
religion identity and the emergence of narrative | 55 |
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