Browsing English (Scholarly Articles) by Author "|~|"
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Beaumont and Fletcher's Rhodes: early modern geopolitics and mythological topography in The Maid's Tragedy
Reid, Lindsay Ann (Humanities Research Centre, Sheffield Hallam University., 2012)Discussions of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher's Maid's Tragedy have infrequently engaged with the matter of its setting. Nonetheless, as we are frequently reminded within the play, its tragic events are purportedly ... -
“Certaine Amorous Sonnets, Betweene Venus and Adonis”: fictive acts of writing in The Passionate Pilgrime of 1612
Reid, Lindsay Ann (Etudes Epistémè, 2012)In c. 1599, the London stationer William Jaggard produced two editions of The Passionate Pilgrime, a collection of twenty poems best known for its inclusion of five sonnets by William Shakespeare. Having been lengthened ... -
Defining Colony and Empire in 19th-Century Irish Nationalism
Pilkington, Lionel; Ryder, Sean (Irish Academic Press, 2005)[no abstract available] -
English Bards and Unknown Reviewers: a Stylometric Analysis of Thomas Moore and the Christabel Review
Benatti, Francesca; Tonra, Justin (University of Notre Dame, 2015)Fraught relations between authors and critics are a commonplace of literary history. The particular case that we discuss in this article, a negative review of Samuel Taylor Coleridge s Christabel (1816), has an additional ... -
'Female agency' in Lady Morgan's The Princess, or, The Béguine (1835).
O'Dwyer, Riana (Humanitas, 2011)This little-known novel expresses two of Lady Morgan's enthusiasms: her love of Europe and interest in travelling there, and her developing feminism. She had previously provoked controversy by her combination of travel and ... -
Francis Hutcheson's aesthetics and his critics in Ireland: Charles-Louis de Villette and Edmund Burke
Carey, Daniel (Research Institute of Irish and Scottish Studies, University of Aberdeen, 2016)In his own time as much as in ours, the response to Francis Hutcheson’s philosophy has concentrated above all on his contribution to moral thought, especially the articulation of a so-called ‘moral sense’.1 The moral ... -
Gender and the Discourse of Young Ireland Nationalism
Ryder, Sean (Galway University Press, 1995) -
Introduction
Barr, Rebecca Anne (Glyphi, 2012) -
Ireland in Ruins: The Figure of Ruin in Nineteenth-Century Irish Poetry
Ryder, Sean (Ashgate, 2005)[no abstract available] -
Ireland s Difficulty: The Novelist s Opportunity
Ryder, Sean (Field Day, 2008)[no abstract available] -
Ireland, India and Popular Nationalism in the Early Nineteenth Century
Ryder, Sean (Irish Academic Press, 2006)[no abstract available] -
James Clarence Mangan: Selected Writings (Introduction)
Ryder, Sean (University College Dublin Press Dublin, 2004)[no abstract available] -
John Locke, Edward Stillingfleet, and the Quarrel over Consensus
Carey, Daniel (Edinburgh University Press, 2017-02)Philosophical antagonism and dispute by no means confined to the early modern period nonetheless enjoyed a moment of particular ferment as new methods and orientations on questions of epistemology and ethics developed ... -
Looking Down the Barrel of History. Review of The Dead Eight, by Carlo Gébler
Kenny, John (The Irish Times, 2011) -
Male Autobiography and Cultural Nationalism: John Mitchel and James Clarence Mangan
Ryder, Sean (Cork University Press, 1992)[no abstract available] -
Mixing With the Devil. Review of Falling Out of Heaven, by John Lynch
Kenny, John (The Irish Times, 2010) -
Modernity s Other: The Quiet Man, The Field and The Commitments
Ryder, Sean (Liffey Press, 2009)[no abstract available] -
A networks-science investigation into the epic poems of Ossian
Yose, Joseph; Kenna, Ralph; Mac Carron, Pádraig; Platini, Thierry; Tonra, Justin (WorldScientific Open Access, 2016-10-21)In 1760 James Macpherson published the first volume of a series of epic poems which he claimed to have translated into English from ancient Scottish-Gaelic sources. The poems, which purported to have been composed by a ...