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 20
... social drama . Social drama - drama involving rites of passage - according to Turner operates along four stages : a breach between social elements occurs ; this precipitates a crisis ; after this comes a period of adjustment and redress ...
... social drama . Social drama - drama involving rites of passage - according to Turner operates along four stages : a breach between social elements occurs ; this precipitates a crisis ; after this comes a period of adjustment and redress ...
Side 22
... social memory of Irish Anglican identity as it emerged in a post - 1641 landscape . ' Social memory ' describes the discursive a priori upon which and within which social experience is judged and assimilated . It is the paradigm ...
... social memory of Irish Anglican identity as it emerged in a post - 1641 landscape . ' Social memory ' describes the discursive a priori upon which and within which social experience is judged and assimilated . It is the paradigm ...
Side 34
... social solidarity , a sense of the Self as a limb of a larger body . The ghetto which the Protestants in Ireland elected to join had , of course , some considerable advantages , not least political and social hegemony , but we must not ...
... social solidarity , a sense of the Self as a limb of a larger body . The ghetto which the Protestants in Ireland elected to join had , of course , some considerable advantages , not least political and social hegemony , but we must not ...
Innhold
PREFACE | 7 |
creating the Catholic Other in Sir John Temples | 28 |
religion identity and the emergence of narrative | 55 |
Opphavsrett | |
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