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3 The Gaelic court and Irish country-house poetry

The politics of an overlooked genre
  • Patricia Palmer
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Ireland and the Renaissance court
This chapter is in the book Ireland and the Renaissance court

Abstract

This study explores the large body of verse addressing noble households. In doing so, she argues that the ‘country-house poem’ should be understood as constituting a distinct genre, and one that provides unique insight into Gaelic and Old English views of the physical space of the court from the fifteenth century to the middle of the seventeenth. In addition to offering a window onto changes in Irish elite culture over the early modern period, the ‘country-house’ poem is analogous to a genre also found contemporaneously in England and thus provides a means for comparative analysis across linguistic and national communities.

Abstract

This study explores the large body of verse addressing noble households. In doing so, she argues that the ‘country-house poem’ should be understood as constituting a distinct genre, and one that provides unique insight into Gaelic and Old English views of the physical space of the court from the fifteenth century to the middle of the seventeenth. In addition to offering a window onto changes in Irish elite culture over the early modern period, the ‘country-house’ poem is analogous to a genre also found contemporaneously in England and thus provides a means for comparative analysis across linguistic and national communities.

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