Skip Trinity Banner Navigation

Skip to main content »

Trinity College Dublin

Skip Main Navigation
ECLRNI, the Eighteenth Century Literature Research Network of Ireland
Members Publications 2019-2020
Statue of Edmund Burke in the grounds of Trinity College Dublin


2020

Books

Moyra Haslett (ed.), Irish Literature in Transition, 1700-1780. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 409.


Essays in books

Aileen Douglas, ‘The Province of Poetry: Women Poets in early eighteenth-century Ireland’, in Moyra Haslett (ed.), Irish Literature in Transition 1700-1780. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. Pp. 227-243.

Moyra Haslett, ‘Introduction’, in Moyra Haslett (ed.), Irish Literature in Transition, 1700-1780. Cambridge University Press. Pp. 1-27.

Moyra Haslett, ‘Fictions of sisterhood in eighteenth-century Irish writing’ in Moyra Haslett (ed.), Irish Literature in Transition, 1700-1780. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 284-304.

Darryl Jones, ‘The Molyneux Problem and Irish Enlightenment’, in Moyra Haslett (ed.), Irish Literature in Transition, 1700-1780. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 110-128.

Daniel Sanjiv Roberts, ‘“An Example to the Whole World”: Patriotism and Imperialism in Early Irish Fiction’, in Moyra Haslett (ed.), Irish Literature in Transition, 1700–1780. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp.207-224.

Sonja Lawrenson, ‘Ireland and Empire’, in Claire Connolly (ed), Irish Literature in Transition, 1780-1830. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. Pp. 359-380.

Amy Prendergast, ‘Transnational influence and exchange: the intersections between Irish and French sentimental novels’, in Moyra Haslett (ed.), Irish Literature in Transition, 1700–1780. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp.189-206.

Ian Campbell Ross. ‘“We Irish”: Writing and Identity from Berkeley to Burke’, in Moyra Haslett (ed.), Irish Literature in Transition 1700-80. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 49-67.


Articles in journals

David Clare, ‘“I Feel Bould at All Times”: Irishness in Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s St. Patrick’s Day and Pizarro’, Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, 109.436 (Winter 2020-21), 386-399.

Aileen Douglas, ‘Maria Edgeworth and Anna Letitia Barbauld: Print, Canons, and Female Literary Authority’, European Romantic Review, 31.6 (2020), 699-713.

Porscha Fermanis, ‘British Creoles: Nationhood, Identity, and Romantic Geopolitics in Robert Southey’s History of Brazil’, Review of English Studies,71.299 (2020), 303-327.

Moyra Haslett, ‘Print, Manuscript and Oral Literary Cultures: The Case of Eighteenth-Century Irish Song’, Roundtable paper on ‘The New Eighteenth-Century Ireland’ in Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 49 (2020), 349-354.

Amy Prendergast, ‘“Open[ing] the flood-gate of literature to her own Sex”: Elizabeth Griffith, translation, transmission and cultural transfer,’ Women’s Writing 27.2 (2020), 184–202.

Daniel Sanjiv Roberts, ‘Imperial Analogues in Early Irish Fiction’, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 49 (2020), 343–48.

Ian Campbell Ross. ‘Dominick Kelly’s “The Humble Petition” and the Poor Scholar: an English poem in Gaelic metre’, Eighteenth-Century Ireland, 35 (2020), 84-96 [with Anne Markey].


2019

Books

Lara Atkin, Sarah Comyn, Nathan Garvey, and Porscha Fermanis, Early Public Libraries and Colonial Citizenship in the British Southern Hemisphere. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. 159.

Daniel Sanjiv Roberts and Jonathan Jeffrey Wright (eds.), Ireland’s Imperial Connections, 1775-1947. London: Palgrave Macmillan. i-xv+323.

Editions

Marie Léoutre, Jean-Paul Pittion, Jane McKee, and Amy Prendergast, eds. The Diary and Accounts of Elias Bouhéreau. Dublin: Irish Manuscripts Commission. Xxiii-599.

Essays in books

Moyra Haslett, ‘“With brisk merry lays”: songs on the Wood’s halfpence affair’, in Hermann J. Real (ed.), Proceedings of the Seventh Münster Symposium on Jonathan Swift. Munich: Wilhelm Fink Verlag. Pp. 193-216.

Aileen Douglas, ‘Maria Edgeworth: Conversations in the “New World” of Children’, in Fiorenzo Fantaccini and Raffaella Leproni (eds.),  'Still Blundering into Sense': Maria Edgeworth, her Context, her Legacy. Florence, Firenze University Press. Pp. 205-222.

Sonja Lawrenson, ‘Prudence and Prejudice: Maria Edgeworth’s “Murad the Unlucky”. In Jonathan Wright and Daniel Sanjiv Roberts (eds.), Ireland and the Colonies, 1775-1947. Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies Series. Basingstoke: Palgrave. Pp. 121-141.

Clíona Ó Gallchoir, ‘“Whole Swarms of Bastards’: A Modest Proposal, the Discourse of Economic Improvement and Protestant Masculinity in Ireland, 1720-1738’, in Rebecca Anne Barr, Sean Brady, and Jane McGaughey (eds.), Ireland and Masculinities in History. Basingstoke: Palgrave. Pp. 39-65.

Ian Campbell Ross. ‘”Alas, poor YORICK!”, in Adam Green (ed.), The Public Domain Review Selected Essays Volume VI. Manchester: PDR Press. Pp. 90-100.

Ian Campbell Ross. ‘Maria Edgeworth and the Culture of Improvement’, in Fiorenzo Fantaccini and Raffella Leproni (eds.), “Still Blundering into Sense”: Maria Edgeworth, Her Context, Her Legacy. Florence: Firenze University Press. Pp. 29-45.

James Ward, ‘Caught in a Contract: Congreve, Farquhar and Contractarian Masculinities’, in Rebecca Anne Barr, Sean Brady, and Jane McGaughey (eds.), Ireland and Masculinities in History. Basingstoke: Palgrave. Pp. 19-38.

Articles in journals

Moyra Haslett, ‘Swift’s Birthdays: The Tradition of Birthday Poems in Swift’s Honour’, Swift Studies, 34 (2019), 7-28.

Electronic publishing

Ian Campbell Ross, ‘Dominick Kelly’ in The Literary Encyclopedia. First Published 13 December 2019; [https://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=14493]

 

Last updated: Apr 17 2024. contact: adouglas@tcd.ie | back to top