The Rivals and Tracy's Ambition

The Rivals and Tracy's Ambition
Author: Gerald Griffin
Publisher: Presses Universitaires du Septentrion
Total Pages: 374
Release: 1978
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

The text of the tales themselves has been reproduced from the Parlour Library edition, Simms & M'Intyre, London, 1851. Gerald Griffin's "Introduction" and "Conclusion" have been reprinted from the first edition of the work, published by Sauders & Otley Ltd., London, 1829 (3 volumes). The present reprinting, therefore, offers in a single volume the work substantially as it appeared in its original three-volume form. It makes available once again two of Gerald Griffin's most characteristic tales which were originally published just after his great success with his most celebrated novel, The Collegians. Dr John Cronin, Senior Lecturer in English at the Queen's University, Belfast, is the author of Sommerville and Ross, Bucknell University Press, 1972. his Gerald Griffin 1803-1840: A Critical Biography will be published in 1978 by the Cambridge University Press.

The Rivals

The Rivals
Author: Gerald Griffin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 318
Release: 1830
Genre:
ISBN:

A Cultural History of the Irish Novel, 1790–1829

A Cultural History of the Irish Novel, 1790–1829
Author: Claire Connolly
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2011-11-17
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1139503227

Claire Connolly offers a cultural history of the Irish novel in the period between the radical decade of the 1790s and the gaining of Catholic Emancipation in 1829. These decades saw the emergence of a group of talented Irish writers who developed and advanced such innovative forms as the national tale and the historical novel: fictions that took Ireland as their topic and setting and which often imagined its history via domestic plots that addressed wider issues of dispossession and inheritance. Their openness to contemporary politics, as well as to recent historiography, antiquarian scholarship, poetry, song, plays and memoirs, produced a series of notable fictions; marked most of all by their ability to fashion from these resources a new vocabulary of cultural identity. This book extends and enriches the current understanding of Irish Romanticism, blending sympathetic textual analysis of the fiction with careful historical contextualization.