Critical Social Thought 346 - Irish Gothic

Spring
2016
01
4.00
Amy Martin
TH 01:15PM-04:05PM
Mount Holyoke College
95595
Reese 301
amartin@mtholyoke.edu
95595,95154
This advanced seminar will study the gothic as a genre and as a malleable yet persistent discursive site in Irish literary and political tradition. From the eighteenth century to the present, the gothic has been used to explore aspects of Irish history, in particular colonialism. The course will focus on texts that engage with three primary problems that the Irish gothic is used to explore: violence and terror, famine, and vampirism as a political metaphor. We will read novels, short fiction, poetry, and archival newspaper writing, including work by Maturin, Edgeworth, Lady Wilde, Mangan, LeFanu, Stoker, Joyce, Bowen, Enright, Deane, Boland, and Heaney.
meets English department 1700-1900 requirement; meets English department seminar requirement
Permission is required for interchange registration during all registration periods.