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Facts and Fictions of Anglo-Irishness

The Novels of Shane Leslie against the Background of his Essayistic Work

by Laura Balomiri (Author)
©2003 Thesis 266 Pages

Summary

The writer, essayist, biographer, and diplomat Sir Shane Leslie (1885-1971) is a remarkable, although little known and even less researched personality of Anglo-Irish culture. Although his many publications rarely reached a second edition, they are highly valued as cultural-historical documents. His novel Doomsland (1923) has received critical praise as ‘a bildungsroman of exceptional interest which has been most unfairly neglected.’ This monograph aims to compensate for this unjustified neglect by trying to rediscover Leslie through his fictional and essayistic work. The research for this thesis included a visit to Castle Leslie in Ireland, Co. Monaghan, explorations of the family archives in Dublin and Belfast, and, as well as interviews with the writer’s son, Sir John Leslie.

Details

Pages
266
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631391648
Language
English
Keywords
Das Autobiographische Leslie, Shane Essay Zeithintergrund Irland /Literatur, Literaturgeschichte Entwicklungsroman
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2003. 265 pp., 1 fig.

Biographical notes

Laura Balomiri (Author)

The Author: Laura Balomiri was born in 1976 in Romania and studied English Literature, Journalism, German Philology and History of Art at the University of Vienna, Austria. She graduated from the department of English and American Studies with this study of Shane Leslie’s life and work. Specialising on twentieth-century literature, she is currently writing her doctoral dissertation, a comparative study of Franz Kafka’s and Salman Rushdie’s fantastic fiction, at the Universities of Vienna, Austria, and Exeter, UK.

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Title: Facts and Fictions of Anglo-Irishness