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ECLRNI, the Eighteenth Century Literature Research Network of Ireland
Members Publications 2009-2010
Statue of Edmund Burke in the grounds of Trinity College Dublin

2010

Books

Aileen Douglas (ed.), Sarah Butler Irish Tales, ed. Ian Campbell Ross, Aileen Douglas and Anne Markey. Dublin: Four Courts Press. Pp. 121.

Anne Markey (ed.), [Anon], Vertue Rewarded; or, The Irish Princess, ed.Ian Campbell Ross and Anne Markey. Dublin: Four Courts Press. Pp. 162

__________  (ed.) Sarah Butler, Irish Tales, ed. Ian Campbell Ross, Aileen Douglas and Anne Markey. Dublin: Four Courts Press. Pp. 121.

Joseph McMinn, Jonathan Swift and the Arts. Newark: University of Delaware Press. Pp. 187.

Ian Campbell Ross (ed.), [Anon], Vertue Rewarded; or, The Irish Princess, ed.Ian Campbell Ross and Anne Markey. Dublin: Four Courts Press. Pp. 162.

_______________________  (ed.) Sarah Butler, Irish Tales, ed. Ian Campbell Ross, Aileen Douglas and Anne Markey. Dublin: Four Courts Press. Pp. 121.
 
Carol Stewart, The Eighteenth-Century Novel and the Secularization of Ethics. Farnham, Ashgate. Pp. viii + 220.

Editions

Essays in books

Johanna Archbold, ‘Book Clubs and societies in eighteenth-century Ireland’ in James Kelly and Martyn J. Powell (eds), Clubs and Societies in eighteenth-century Ireland. Dublin: Four Courts Press.

Daniel Carey, ‘Henry Neville’s The Isle of Pines: From Sexual Utopia to Political Dystopia’, in Chloë Houston (ed.) New Worlds Reflected. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2010. Pp. 203-18.

_______________   ‘Innateness’, in S.-J. Savonius-Wroth, Paul Schuurman, and Jonathan Walmsley (eds.), The Continuum Companion to Locke. London: Continuum, 2010. Pp. 165-8.

Moyra Haslett, ‘The Love of Friendship’, in Ros Ballaster (ed.), The History of British Women’s Writing, 1690-1750. London: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp.215-231.

Christina Morin, ‘Undermining Morality? National Destabilisation in The Wild Irish Girl and Corinne, ou L’Italie’, in Elke D'hoker, Raphael Ingelbien, and Hedwig Schwall (eds.), Irish Women Writers: New Critical Perspectives. Oxford: Peter Lang. Pp. 169-185.

Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, 'Obscure and giddy sects: Milton and the scandal of divorce' in Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and John Flood (eds.), Heresy and Orthodoxy in Early English Literature, 1350-1680, Dublin: Four Courts. Pp.127-151. 


Journals

Articles in journals

Rebecca Anne Barr, ‘Richardson's Sir Charles Grandison and the Symptoms of Subjectivity’, in The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation, 51:4 (Winter 2010), 1-21.

Daniel Carey, ‘The State of Play: English Literary Scholarship and Criticism in a New Century’, Cadernos de Letras (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro), no. 27 (2010): 16-32. 118 (Fall, 2010) 30-42.
http://www.letras.ufrj.br/anglo_germanicas/cadernos/numeros/122010/textos/cl301220100danielcarey.pdf

Lucy Cogan, ‘Charlotte Brooke's "Mäon" and the Constructions of Anglo-Irish Identity’, Victorian Newsletter, 118 (Fall, 2010) 30-42.

Porscha Fermanis, ‘William Godwin’s History of the Commonwealth and the Psychology of Individual History’, Review of English Studies,  61 (2010), 773-800.

Moyra Haslett, ‘Bluestocking Feminism Revisited: The Satirical Figure of the Bluestocking’, Women’s Writing, Vol. 17. 3 (2010), 458-477.

Darrell Jones, ‘Difference and Representation in Locke and Sterne’, The Shandean, 21 (2010), 84-102.

Anne Markey, ‘The English governess, her wild Irish pupil, and her wandering daughter: migration and maternal absence in Georgian children’s fiction’, Eighteenth-Century Ireland/Iris an dá chultúr, 26 (2011), 160-175.

Jennifer Orr, “No John Clare”: Minute Observations from the Ulster Cottage Door 1790-1800’, John Clare Society Journal 29 (2010), 51-70.

________________  “In costume Scotch o’er bog and park, my hame-bred muse delighted plays”: Samuel Thomson’s fashioning of landscape in Ulster Poetry’, Scottish Literary Review, 10 (Spring/Summer, 2010), 41-58.

Shaun Regan, 'Adorning the Plainness of Truth: Equiano and the Art of Narrative', 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era, Special Feature on Olaudah Equiano: African or American?, 17 (2010), 313-36.


Electronic publishing

2009

Books

Daniel Carey, The Postcolonial Enlightenment: Eighteenth-Century Colonialism and Postcolonial Theory, ed. Daniel Carey and Lynn Festa. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 378pp. + xi.

Ian Campbell Ross (ed.) Laurence Sterne, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. A new edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press, xliv + 604 pp.

Porscha Fermanis, John Keats and the Ideas of the Enlightenment. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP. 232 pp.

Raffaella Leproni (trans. and ed., with an introduction.), Maria Edgeworth, Due racconti. Rome: Kappa. 121 pp.


Essays in books

Carol Baraniuk, ‘The Great Enchanter', in Johnny Rodger and Gerard Carruthers (eds.), Fickle Man: Robert Burns in the 21 st Century . Dingwall: Sandstone Press. Pp. 234-241.

_______________, ‘No Bardolatry Here: The Independence of the Ulster-Scots Poetic Tradition', in Frank Ferguson and Andrew Holmes (eds.), Revising Robert Burns and Ulster: literature, religion and politics c. 1770 to 1920. Dublin: Four Courts Press. Pp. 64-82.

_______________, ‘The Leid, the Pratoe and the Buik: Northern Cultural Markers in the Works of James Orr', in James P. Byrne, Padraig Kirwan and Michael O'Sullivan (eds.), Affecting Irishness: Negotiating Cultural Identity Within and Beyond the Nation. Oxford: Peter Lang. Pp. 103-120.

Daniel Carey: (with Lynn Festa) ‘Introduction: Some Answers to the Question: “What is Postcolonial Enlightenment?”', 1-33.

_______________, ‘Reading Contrapuntally: Robinson Crusoe, Slavery, and Postcolonial Theory', 105-36. (with Sven Trakulhun) ‘Universalism, Diversity, and the Postcolonial Enlightenment', 240-80.

Jennifer Orr, ‘Samuel Thomson’s Pikes and Politics: Negotiating a Place in Scottish and Irish Literature’, in McNair, A and Ryder, J (eds). Further from the frontiers: cross-currents in Irish and Scottish Studies. Aberdeen: AHRC Centre for Irish and Scottish Studies, 2009.

________________ ‘1798, Before, and Beyond: Samuel Thomson and the poetics of Ulster-Scots identity’, in Frank Ferguson and Andrew Holmes (eds.), Revising Robert Burns and Ulster: literature, religion, and politics, c.1700-1920, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2009. Pp. 106-126.

Jennifer Orr & Gerard Carruthers, ‘The Deil’s awa wi’ the Exciseman: Robert Burns the Giver of Guns to Revolutionary France?’, in Johnny Rodger & Gerard Carruthers (eds.), Fickle Man: Robert Burns in the 21st Century, Sandstone Press. Pp. 257-266.

Ian Campbell Ross, 'Laurence Sterne's life, milieu and literary career' in Thomas Keymer (ed.), Cambridge Companion to Laurence Sterne. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Pp. 5–20

Daniel Sanjiv Roberts, ‘From India to Ireland: The Travels of Dean Mahomed (1794)’, in Leaves from Your Own Book: Papers in Honour of Sudhakar Marathe. New Delhi: Authors Press.


Journals

Articles in journals

Sharon Murphy, ‘Making (Protestant) Men: Alfred and Galba and the East India Company Soldiers' in Jessica Meyer and Heather Ellis eds., Masculinity and the Other. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars' Press. Pp. 219-235. 2.

Carol Stewart, 'Pamela and the Anglican Crisis of the 1730s', Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 32.1, 37-51.

Daniel Sanjiv Roberts, ‘“In the Service of the Honourable East India Company”: Politics and Identity in Dean Mahomet’s Travels (1794)’, Eighteenth-Century Ireland: Iris an dá Chultúr, 24 (2009), 115-134.

Electronic publishing

Jennifer Orr, ‘“To Mr Robert Burns”: Verse Epistles from an Irish Poetic Circle’, Frank R. Shaw (ed.), Electric Scotland: http://www.electricscotland.com/familytree/frank/burns_lives62.htm

 

 

 

 

 



 





 

 

 


Last updated: Sep 16 2013. contact: icross@tcd.ie | back to top