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Representing Ireland
Literature and the Origins of Conflict, 1534–1660
Essays dealing with the representation of Ireland by English Renaissance writers in the early modern period.
Brendan Bradshaw (Edited by), Andrew Hadfield (Edited by), Willy Maley (Edited by)
9780521129268, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 4 February 2010
264 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.39 kg
In this volume of essays a group of historians and literary critics debate the representation of early modern Ireland by English Renaissance authors. The contributions deal both with modes of representation – aesthetic, geographic, literary, political, visual – and with the biographies of representative individuals. Thus historical commentary and textual analysis go hand-in-hand with biography and chronology. The essays are interdisciplinary, combining traditional methods of literary and historical enquiry with a range of new theoretical approaches to texts and their authors. There are discussions of the work of major writers including John Bale, Gabriel Harvey, Barnaby Googe, Edmund Spenser, John Milton and Geoffrey Keating in the context of Irish politics from the Reformation to the Restoration.
Introduction: Irish representations and English alternatives
1. The English invasion of Ireland
2. Translating the reformation: John Bale's Irish Vocacyon
3. Encountering Ireland: Gabriel Harvey, Edmund Spenser, and English Colonial Ventures
4. Off the map: charting uncertainty in renaissance Ireland
5. Mapping mutability: or, Spenser's Irish plot
6. 'The Fatal Destiny of that Land': Elizabethan views of Ireland
7. Tom Lee: the posing peacemaker
8. Geoffrey Keating: apologist of Irish Ireland
9. How Milton and some contemporaries read Spenser's View
10. Extreme or mainstream?: the English independents and the Cromwellian reconquest of Ireland, 1649–1651.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: general [DSB]
