Irish Cosmopolitanism

Irish Cosmopolitanism Location and Dislocation in James Joyce, Elizabeth Bowen, and Samuel Beckett

Hardback (30 Dec 2014)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Looking at the writing of three Irish expatriates who lived in Trieste, London, and Paris, Nels Pearson challenges conventional critical trends that view their work as either affirming Irish anticolonial sentiment or embracing international identity. In reality, he argues, these writers work constantly back and forth between a sense of national belonging that remains incomplete and ideas of human universality tied to their new global environments. For these and many other Irish writers, national and international concerns do not conflict, but overlap-and the interplay between them motivates Irish modernism.

Joyce's Ulysses strives to articulate the interdependence of an Irish identity and a universal perspective. Bowen's exiled, unrooted characters were never firmly rooted in the first place. And in Beckett, the unsettled origin is felt most keenly when it is abandoned for exile. These writers demonstrate the displacement felt by many Irish citizens in an ever-changing Ireland unsteadied by long and turbulent decolonization. Ultimately, their work displays a twofold struggle to pinpoint national identity while adapting to a fluid cosmopolitan world.

Book information

ISBN: 9780813060521
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Imprint: University Press of Florida
Pub date:
DEWEY: 820.99415
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: xi, 179
Weight: 394g
Height: 161mm
Width: 235mm
Spine width: 16mm