Author’s Response: Theory as Agent

Authors

  • Eugene O'Brien Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2595-8127.v4i1p45-48

Keywords:

Irish identity, William Butler Yeats, James Joyce, The critic and the author, Tony Corbett

Abstract

Such conceptual unpacking was a motivating factor in the writing of this book, concerned as it is with those almost hoary tropes of Irish identity and the writings of Yeats and Joyce. As Corbett has suggested, these issues have been discussed ad nauseum and yet, it seemed to me, not within a theoretically driven intellectual paradigm which might tease out some of the nuances within them. It was my hope to defamiliarize some of these ‘givens’ in a discourse paralleling that of Brian Friel, who, in Translations, acknowledges the need for constantly renewing our relationship to language and the images of the past embodied in language. Otherwise, as he puts it, ‘we fossilize.’ My own efforts in the field of renewal relate both to language and ideology, using theory as an agent of defossilization in terms of Irishness in general and Irish nationalism in particular.

Author Biography

  • Eugene O'Brien, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick

    Eugene O’Brien is Head of the English Department in Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick in Ireland. His first book The Question of Irish Identity in the Writings of William Butler Yeats and James Joyce, was published in 1998, and two more, Literature, Identity, Religion and the Epistemology of Irish Nationalism, and Seamus Heaney – Creating Irelands of the Mind, are forthcoming in 2002. He is editor
    of the Edwin Mellen Press’s Studies in Irish Literature and Irish Studies series. He is also editor of a new series from Liffey Press in Dublin entitled Studies on Contemporary Ireland. He is a member of the editorial board of Nua and reviews editor with Minerva. He has published over 30 articles and reviews on Irish writing and literary and critical theory in journals such as Nua, Irish Studies Review, Imprimatur, Hermathena, Minerva, Jouvert, Writing Ulster, The Journal of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Studies, The Brazilian Journal of Irish Studies and The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies.

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Published

2002-06-30

Issue

Section

The Critic and the Author

How to Cite

O'Brien, E. (2002). Author’s Response: Theory as Agent. ABEI Journal, 4(1), 45-48. https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2595-8127.v4i1p45-48