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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Anna Pilz , Whitney StandleePublisher: Manchester University Press Imprint: Manchester University Press ISBN: 9781526127112ISBN 10: 1526127113 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 07 March 2018 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews'This essay collection is an invaluable resource that covers a glaringly underexplored area of literature by Irish women. The book highlights the years between 1878 and 1922, which, as the co-editors observe, was a pivotal historical period when women entered the literary marketplace in conspicuously large numbers . Nevertheless, this is a development in publishing which has tended to elude the academic gaze . As the contributors emphasise, the gaze which these Irish women faced, and which their legacy continues to face, is predominantly masculinist. The 12 essays cover a range of well-known and marginalised women writers from the North and South. The editors' aim is to present a corrective to the infamous, all-male poster of Irish Writers , and work to fill in the gaps caused by the gender imbalance of Irish literary history. In her foreword, Lia Mills remarks upon importance of attentive engagement with the work of women writers . Otherwise, we are left with a false sense of a series of giant leaps rather than something organic, various, evolving . This book envisions the latter trajectory, providing a more holistic view of writing by Irish women during a defining moment in literary history.' Dawn Miranda Sherratt-Bado, Irish Times 'This sparkling volume advances a timely corrective to the ways in which, as its editors put it, Irish writing has often been conceived in the popular imagination as a male phenomenon (1). Over 12 fascinating chapters, Irish Women's Writing 1878-1922: Advancing the Cause of Liberty provides a wealth of fresh insights and compelling analysis of hidden or neglected treasures of Irish women's writing...Overall, this important and path-breaking volume highlights the potential for further research in Irish women's writing. Such scholarship continues to reconfigure Irish Studies and challenge its androcentric biases, and Pilz and Standlee's achievement here is significant in this regard.' Michael Pierse, Queen's University Belfast, Irish Studies Review, Volume 25, 2017 - Issue 3 'A significant and timely work of scholarship.' Katie Mishler, Women's History Association of Ireland -- . 'This essay collection is an invaluable resource that covers a glaringly underexplored area of literature by Irish women. The book highlights the years between 1878 and 1922, which, as the co-editors observe, was a pivotal historical period when women entered the literary marketplace in conspicuously large numbers . Nevertheless, this is a development in publishing which has tended to elude the academic gaze . As the contributors emphasise, the gaze which these Irish women faced, and which their legacy continues to face, is predominantly masculinist. The 12 essays cover a range of well-known and marginalised women writers from the North and South. The editors' aim is to present a corrective to the infamous, all-male poster of Irish Writers , and work to fill in the gaps caused by the gender imbalance of Irish literary history. In her foreword, Lia Mills remarks upon importance of attentive engagement with the work of women writers . Otherwise, we are left with a false sense of a series of giant leaps rather than something organic, various, evolving . This book envisions the latter trajectory, providing a more holistic view of writing by Irish women during a defining moment in literary history.' Dawn Miranda Sherratt-Bado, Irish Times 'This sparkling volume advances a timely corrective to the ways in which, as its editors put it, Irish writing has often been conceived in the popular imagination as a male phenomenon (1). Over 12 fascinating chapters, Irish Women's Writing 1878-1922: Advancing the Cause of Liberty provides a wealth of fresh insights and compelling analysis of hidden or neglected treasures of Irish women's writing.Overall, this important and path-breaking volume highlights the potential for further research in Irish women's writing. Such scholarship continues to reconfigure Irish Studies and challenge its androcentric biases, and Pilz and Standlee's achievement here is significant in this regard.' Michael Pierse, Queen's University Belfast, Irish Studies Review, Volume 25, 2017 - Issue 3 -- . 'This essay collection is an invaluable resource that covers a glaringly underexplored area of literature by Irish women. The book highlights the years between 1878 and 1922, which, as the co-editors observe, was a pivotal historical period when women entered the literary marketplace in conspicuously large numbers . Nevertheless, this is a development in publishing which has tended to elude the academic gaze . As the contributors emphasise, the gaze which these Irish women faced, and which their legacy continues to face, is predominantly masculinist. The 12 essays cover a range of well-known and marginalised women writers from the North and South. The editors' aim is to present a corrective to the infamous, all-male poster of Irish Writers , and work to fill in the gaps caused by the gender imbalance of Irish literary history. In her foreword, Lia Mills remarks upon importance of attentive engagement with the work of women writers . Otherwise, we are left with a false sense of a series of giant leaps rather than something organic, various, evolving . This book envisions the latter trajectory, providing a more holistic view of writing by Irish women during a defining moment in literary history.' Dawn Miranda Sherratt-Bado, Irish Times 'This sparkling volume advances a timely corrective to the ways in which, as its editors put it, Irish writing has often been conceived in the popular imagination as a male phenomenon (1). Over 12 fascinating chapters, Irish Women's Writing 1878-1922: Advancing the Cause of Liberty provides a wealth of fresh insights and compelling analysis of hidden or neglected treasures of Irish women's writing.Overall, this important and path-breaking volume highlights the potential for further research in Irish women's writing. Such scholarship continues to reconfigure Irish Studies and challenge its androcentric biases, and Pilz and Standlee's achievement here is significant in this regard.' Michael Pierse, Queen's University Belfast, Irish Studies Review, Volume 25, 2017 - Issue 3 'A significant and timely work of scholarship.' Katie Mishler, Women's History Association of Ireland -- . Author InformationAnna Pilz is Irish Research Council Fellow in the School of English at the University College Cork Whitney Standlee is Lecturer in English Literature and Cultural Studies at the University of Worcester Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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