Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Digital Commons Network

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network

Anne Enright’S Reply To James Joyce: A Nation’S Tale Told Through The Gathering, Saide Harb-Ranero May 2022

Anne Enright’S Reply To James Joyce: A Nation’S Tale Told Through The Gathering, Saide Harb-Ranero

Master’s Theses and Projects

Particular to the Irish gothic, a postcolonial history seems to repeat itself in Anne Enright’s The Gathering. The victims of an atrocious sexual crime seem to circulate this hidden secret that all tragedy revolves around, yet no one is willing to speak about it. Enright suggests that the same oppressed past of Ireland’s history keeps creeping up to the surface, even in the twenty-first century. Veronica and Liam Hegarty, Enright’s main characters, demonstrate one of the main tropes of the gothic where no matter how long one might suppress a memory, it is bound to come back and reveal the …


Roundtable - Seamus Heaney: A Tribute, Ellen Scheible May 2014

Roundtable - Seamus Heaney: A Tribute, Ellen Scheible

Bridgewater Review

No abstract provided.


We Don't Need No Water: Joyce And O'Brien Burning The Roof Of High Art, Robert J. Cannata Jan 2006

We Don't Need No Water: Joyce And O'Brien Burning The Roof Of High Art, Robert J. Cannata

Undergraduate Review

No abstract provided.