Kapitel
Open Access
Figures
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Acknowledgements viii
- Introduction: Exorcising the Dead, Summoning the Living 1
-
Part I Irish Gothic in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
- Chapter 1 ‘Quitting the Plain and Useful Path of History and Fact’: Early Irish Gothic and the Literary Marketplace 29
- Chapter 2 ‘How Mute Their Tongues’: Irish Gothic Poetry in the Nineteenth Century 46
-
Part II Irish Gothic Genres and Forms
- Chapter 3 ‘A Dead, Living, Murdered Man’: Staging the Irish Gothic 65
- Chapter 4 Gothic Forms in Irish Cinema 83
- Chapter 5 Gothic Fiction and Irish Children’s Literature 98
- Chapter 6 Irish Ecogothic 114
- Chapter 7 Gothic Fiction in the Irish Language 135
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Part III Irish Gothic, Theology, and Confessional Identities
- Chapter 8 Protestant Gothic 153
- Chapter 9 Bram Stoker, Dracula and the Irish Dimension 174
- Chapter 10 Irish Catholic Writers and the Gothic: Situating Thomas Furlong’s The Doom of Derenzie (1829) 194
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Part IV Irish Gothic Writers: Gender and Sexuality
- Chapter 11 Irish Women Writers and the Supernatural 213
- Chapter 12 Reflection, Anxiety and the Feminised Body: Contemporary Irish Gothic 232
- Chapter 13 Foreign Bodies, Irish Voices: Gothic Masculinities in Irish Literature, Film and Radio Drama 252
- Notes on Contributors 272
- Index 276
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Acknowledgements viii
- Introduction: Exorcising the Dead, Summoning the Living 1
-
Part I Irish Gothic in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
- Chapter 1 ‘Quitting the Plain and Useful Path of History and Fact’: Early Irish Gothic and the Literary Marketplace 29
- Chapter 2 ‘How Mute Their Tongues’: Irish Gothic Poetry in the Nineteenth Century 46
-
Part II Irish Gothic Genres and Forms
- Chapter 3 ‘A Dead, Living, Murdered Man’: Staging the Irish Gothic 65
- Chapter 4 Gothic Forms in Irish Cinema 83
- Chapter 5 Gothic Fiction and Irish Children’s Literature 98
- Chapter 6 Irish Ecogothic 114
- Chapter 7 Gothic Fiction in the Irish Language 135
-
Part III Irish Gothic, Theology, and Confessional Identities
- Chapter 8 Protestant Gothic 153
- Chapter 9 Bram Stoker, Dracula and the Irish Dimension 174
- Chapter 10 Irish Catholic Writers and the Gothic: Situating Thomas Furlong’s The Doom of Derenzie (1829) 194
-
Part IV Irish Gothic Writers: Gender and Sexuality
- Chapter 11 Irish Women Writers and the Supernatural 213
- Chapter 12 Reflection, Anxiety and the Feminised Body: Contemporary Irish Gothic 232
- Chapter 13 Foreign Bodies, Irish Voices: Gothic Masculinities in Irish Literature, Film and Radio Drama 252
- Notes on Contributors 272
- Index 276