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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Matthew L. ReznicekPublisher: Clemson University Digital Press Imprint: Clemson University Digital Press ISBN: 9781942954323ISBN 10: 1942954328 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 20 July 2017 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsA compelling and refreshing study of the role of Paris in Irish women's literary imaginations, ranging from Edgeworth and Owenson to Somerville and Ross and Thurston. Through a series of elegantly argued readings, Reznicek valuably extends our understanding of both the urban and female spheres, and of the particular appeal and anxieties that characterize the emerging metropolitan modern. Margaret Kelleher, Chair of Anglo-Irish Literature and Drama, University College Dublin The European Metropolis offers a wide-ranging account of the powerful role played by Paris in the imagination of Irish women writers. In redrawing the map of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Irish women's writing, Matthew L. Reznicek helps us to reimagine the ambitions, appetites, and energies of authors such as Maria Edgeworth, Lady Morgan, Somerville and Ross, Katherine Cecil Thurston, and Kate O'Brien. Claire Connolly, Professor of Modern English, University College Cork, author of A Cultural History of the Irish Novel, 1790-1829 In The European Metropolis, Matthew L. Reznicek presents a timely and essential rereading of the centrality of Paris to the alienation of consumer capitalism by showing how Irish literature written by women in the nineteenth century challenges the interdependent binaries undergirding modern patriarchy. Reznicek's study is nothing short of groundbreaking because we have waited too long to center the Irish female voice in our understanding of the development of modern European subjectivity. Ellen Scheible, Coordinator of Irish Studies, Bridgewater State University, editor of Rethinking Joyce's Dubliners The European Metropolis offers a daring Marxist-feminist analysis on one of the most central urban spaces in European history. Reznicek pushes readers to reconsider the role of Paris's cityscape in nineteenth-century literature as it is represented in Irish women's novels instead of those predominantly written by and about men. It skillfully surveys topographies of the novel with theories of modernity in architectural, urban, feminist, and Irish studies. Derek Gladwin, University of British Columbia, author of Contentious Terrains In this highly original and engaging study of Irish women's writing, Reznicek provides a fresh and vigorous account of the development of the female Bildungsroman during the long nineteenth century. Drawing upon an adroit selection of canonical and lesser-known fictions, The European Metropolis generates a dynamic analysis that rigorously reconceptualizes the key texts and contexts informing Irish literary production in this period. Sonja Lawrenson, Manchester Metropolitan University Author InformationMatthew L. Reznicek earned his PhD in English at the Queen's University of Belfast in Northern Ireland, where he studied nineteenth-century Irish women's literature. This provided the opportunity to access the Somerville and Ross papers at the Queen's University of Belfast McClay Library, as well as collections of Edgeworth's papers and Owenson's novels at the National Library of Ireland. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |