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OverviewBestselling Irish novelist Sally Rooney has emerged as the defining voice of a generation, a cultural phenomenon whose spare, intelligent prose and sharp social insight have reshaped contemporary fiction and sparked a global conversation about intimacy, politics, and the millennial condition. This new collection brings together contributors from a wide range of disciplines to offer fresh critical readings of Rooney's influential novels, alongside adaptable strategies for teaching her work in today's undergraduate and graduate classrooms. The essays situate Rooney within literary traditions from Romantic poetry to the bildungsroman and the contemporary campus novel, while engaging with contemporary topics such as gender politics, late capitalism, and media adaptation. Providing accessible yet rigorous frameworks for exploring Rooney's fiction, this volume confirms her significance not only within contemporary literary studies but also as a cultural force whose work reaffirms the relevance of the humanities in the twenty-first-century classroom. Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ellen Scheible , Barry Devine , Claire Bracken , María Amor Barros-del RíoPublisher: Bucknell University Press,U.S. Imprint: Bucknell University Press,U.S. Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9781684486021ISBN 10: 1684486025 Pages: 258 Publication Date: 09 June 2026 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , General/trade , Professional & Vocational , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsForeword by Claire Bracken Introduction Ellen Scheible and Barry Devine Critical Perspectives 1 Youth Struggle and Post-Celtic Tiger Ireland in Sally Rooney's Novels Maria Amor Barros-del Rio 2 ""Something New and Uncomfortably Familiar"": Sally Rooney's Elusive Play with Genre Jennifer A. Slivka 3 ""Bit Hard to Fit In"": Sally Rooney and Ireland's Campus Novel Deirdre Flynn 4 The Relational Novel in an Era of Individualization Mary M. McGlynn 5 ""Maybe What Keats Meant"": Sally Rooney and Romanticism Colleen English 6 ""Two Little Plants Sharing the Same Plot of Soil"": Twinned Bildungsromans in Sally Rooney's Normal People Cassidy Allen 7 ""Lockdown Lovers"": The Spaces of Television's Normal People Matthew J. Fee 8 Conversations with Friends and the Queer Comedy of Remarriage Katarzyna Bartoszyńska Pedagogical Approaches 9 ""I Kind of Suffer from Anxiety with These Things"": Disconnect and Emotional Resonance for College Students Reading Sally Rooney's Novels Molly Ferguson 10 Edited Selves in Sally Rooney's Fiction, or How I Learned to Think Like a Millennial Rachael Sealy Lynch 11 Moral Injury in Sally Rooney's Normal People John C. Kerrigan 12 Teaching Narrative Empathy with Beautiful World, Where Are You Barry Devine 13 Trauma, Writing, and Healing in Sally Rooney's Normal People: A Pedagogical Approach Melania Terrazas Coda Revitalizing the Humanities: Gender, Literature, and the Crisis of Masculinity in Rooney's Intermezzo Kristy Destefano Acknowledgments Bibliography Notes on Contributors IndexReviews""In this beautifully imagined collection, perceptive essays demonstrate the many rewards of studying Sally Rooney's novels. Readers and teachers will relish the fresh insights into Rooney's writing, as well as the compelling illustrations of attentive critical reading in our distracted contemporary moment."" - Paige Reynolds, author of Modernism in Irish Women's Contemporary Writing: The Stubborn Mode ""This lively, urgent collection showcases the breadth and depth of scholarly work on an enigmatic literary superstar. While it is accessible, the authors and editors have been unafraid to address the complexity and controversies in Rooney's work. It will undoubtedly prove invaluable for academics and students of contemporary Irish writing."" - Caroline Magennis, author of Northern Irish Writing After the Troubles: Intimacies, Affects, Pleasures ""The essays gathered here critically illuminate Sally Rooney's writing as it confronts the myriad issues of the twenty-first century. Her work is important, and this superb collection deftly amplifies that importance, positioning her as an essential chronicler of the 'now.'"" - Derek Hand, author of A History of the Irish Novel ""Sally Rooney is often described as the voice of the millennial generation. Foregrounding pedagogical approaches to teaching Rooney's work, this volume offers valuable insights into how her writing resonates with Gen Z and audiences beyond."" - Yen-Chi Wu, author of Irish Writers and The New Yorker in the Mid-Twentieth Century ""This collection of essays is a scholarly examination of one of Ireland's most prominent contemporary writers, Sally Rooney. It includes a wide range of topics, and has a unique angle that emphasizes the pedagogical values of teaching Rooney's work to college students. This volume has great potential to be an essential reader for students, teachers, and researchers in Irish studies—and more broadly—contemporary literature."" - Sally Barr Ebest, author of The Banshees: A Literary History of Irish American Women Writers ""In this beautifully imagined collection, perceptive essays demonstrate the many rewards of studying Sally Rooney's novels. Readers and teachers will relish the fresh insights into Rooney's writing, as well as the compelling illustrations of attentive critical reading in our distracted contemporary moment."" - Paige Reynolds, author of Modernism in Irish Women's Contemporary Writing: The Stubborn Mode ""This lively, urgent collection showcases the breadth and depth of scholarly work on an enigmatic literary superstar. While it is accessible, the authors and editors have been unafraid to address the complexity and controversies in Rooney's work. It will undoubtedly prove invaluable for academics and students of contemporary Irish writing."" - Caroline Magennis, author of Northern Irish Writing After the Troubles: Intimacies, Affects, Pleasures ""The essays gathered here critically illuminate Sally Rooney's writing as it confronts the myriad issues of the twenty-first century. Her work is important, and this superb collection deftly amplifies that importance, positioning her as an essential chronicler of the 'now.'"" - Derek Hand, author of A History of the Irish Novel ""Sally Rooney is often described as the voice of the millennial generation. Foregrounding pedagogical approaches to teaching Rooney's work, this volume offers valuable insights into how her writing resonates with Gen Z and audiences beyond."" - Yen-Chi Wu, author of Irish Writers and The New Yorker in the Mid-Twentieth Century ""This collection of essays is a scholarly examination of one of Ireland's most prominent contemporary writers, Sally Rooney. It includes a wide range of topics, and has a unique angle that emphasizes the pedagogical values of teaching Rooney's work to college students. This volume has great potential to be an essential reader for students, teachers, and researchers in Irish studies—and more broadly—contemporary literature."" - Sally Barr Ebest, author of The Banshees: A Literary History of Irish American Women Writers Author InformationEllen Scheible is a professor of English and director of honors at Bridgewater State University in Massachusetts. She is the author of Body Politics in Contemporary Irish Women's Fiction: The Literary Legacy of Mother Ireland and coeditor of Rethinking Joyce's ""Dubliners."" Barry Devine is an associate professor of English at Heidelberg University in Tiffin, Ohio. His recent work appears in The Cambridge Centenary ""Ulysses"" and The Irish Bildungsroman. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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