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Full Description
This original and innovative book proposes 'dismemory' as a new form of intertextual engagement with Shakespeare by modern and contemporary Irish writers. Through reflection on these canonical writers and ranging across thirteen Shakespeare plays, Taylor-Collins demonstrates how Irish writers who helped to fashion and critique the Irish nation state carry an indelible, if often subdued, mark of Shakespeare's early modern English influence.
The volume overall renews and revitalises the Shakespeare-modern Ireland connection: Taylor-Collins reveals Hamlet's hauntological legacy in Playboy of the Western World, Ulysses, and Ghosts; how the corporal economies that exert pressure from Coriolanus and Ben Jonson flicker through to the antiheroes in Beckett's Three Novels; and how the landed legacies of territorial contests in Shakespeare are engaged with in Yeats's poetry, and similarly how the diseased muddiness in Hamlet is addressed by Heaney.
Contents
Introduction: Remembering memory
Part I: Ghosts
1 'Go on from this': J. M. Synge's Playboy
2 'Remember me': Hamlet, memory, and Leopold Bloom's poiesis
3 'Someone wholly other': John Banville's Ghosts
Part II: Bodies
4 '[M]y genius for forgetting': Samuel Beckett's theatrical bodies
5 'Kate had herself sterilized': O'Brien's self-disciplining bodies
Part III: Land
6 '[R]ights of memory': W. B. Yeats, surface, and counter-memory
7 '[D]ithering, blathering': Seamus Heaney, the diseased word-hoard, and the Historian
Conclusion: 'I disremember'
References
Index