Washed by the Gulf Stream: The Historic and Geographic Relation of Irish and Caribbean Literature Contributor(s): McGarrity, Maria (Author) |
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ISBN: 1611490936 ISBN-13: 9781611490930 Publisher: University of Delaware Press OUR PRICE: $56.05 Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats Published: December 2008 |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Literary Criticism | English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh - Literary Criticism | Caribbean & Latin American - Literary Criticism | Reference |
Dewey: 820.994 |
Physical Information: 196 pages |
Themes: - Cultural Region - Latin America - Cultural Region - British Isles - Cultural Region - Caribbean & West Indies - Cultural Region - Ireland |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: This is an historically comparative postcolonial study asserting the dialogic relation between Irish and Caribbean narrative form, relating Irish Big House and Caribbean Plantation novels, the "errantry" of Joyce's and Walcott's epic geographies, and the transition from traditional bildungsroman modes of exile to contemporary memoirs of 'diseased' emigration. The book focuses on the demise of empire and the role of geography in creating an "island imaginary" for writers from James Joyce and Jean Rhys to Jamaica Kincaid and Frank McCourt. The complex interplay of cultures that makes up both Ireland and the Caribbean, the islands they inhabit both literally and metaphorically, ensures that neither peoples nor cultures exist in anything less than a "meta-archipelago." The links in these chains of islands and peoples, dispersed geographically, economically, and politically, connect strongly, not simply throughout the North Atlantic but throughout the larger diasporic world. |