Contents: Raphaël Ingelbien: Irish Studies, the Postcolonial Paradigm and the Comparative Mandate – Oona Frawley: ‘Who’s he when he’s at home?’ Spenser and Irishness – Anne-Catherine Lobo: Irishness and the Body: The Presence of the Body in the Debates on Poverty in the Early Nineteenth Century – Linda M. Hagan: The Ulster-Scots and the ‘Greening’ of Ireland: A Precarious Belonging? – Niall O’Gallagher: ‘Ma Right Insane Yirwanny Us Jimmy?’: Irishness in Modern Scottish Writing – Carol Baraniuk: The Leid, the Pratoe and the Buik: Northern Cultural Markers in the Works of James Orr – Aoileann Ní Éigeartaigh: ‘No Rootless Colonist’: John Hewitt’s Regionalist Approach to Identity – Maureen T. Reddy: Representing Travellers – Jason King: Irish Multicultural Fiction: Metaphors of Miscegenation and Interracial Romance – Iris Lindahl-Raittila: Subversive Identities: Femininity, Sexuality and ‘Irishness’ in Novels by Edna O’Brien – Justin Carville: A ‘Sympathetic Look’: Documentary Humanism and Irish Identity in Dorothea Lange’s ‘Irish Country People’ – Thomas W. Ihde: Irish-American Identity and the Irish Language – William H. Mulligan, Jr: Shades of Green and Orange: Irish Identity in Diaspora – Florence Schneider: Muldoon’s Palimpsestic Irishness – Ruth Barton: The Voice of Pierce Brosnan – Daniel Tobin: Shades, Minstrel and Majestic – Maureen E. Ruprecht Fadem: Self-Contradiction in a Small Place: Anne Devlin’s ‘Other at the Edge of Life’.
The Editors: James P. Byrne is Adjunct Assistant Professor of
English at Emerson College, Boston. He was a Fulbright Scholar to
the University of Massachusetts in 2000. He has recently co-edited
the three-volume work Ireland and the Americas: Culture, Politics,
and History (2008).
Padraig Kirwan is currently Lecturer in the Literature of the
Americas at Goldsmiths, University of London. He was a Fulbright
Scholar to the University of California in 2002 and an Irish
Research Council Scholar from 2000 to 2001. His work has appeared
in a number of journals including the Journal of American
Studies.
Michael O’Sullivan is Assistant Professor of English at the Chinese
University of Hong Kong. His recent publications include Michel
Henry: Incarnation, Barbarism and Belief (published by Peter Lang
in 2006) and The Incarnation of Language: Joyce, Proust and a
Philosophy of the Flesh (2008).
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