Reading the (in)-between-(in) the Borderlands of North-West Ulster: Brian McGilloway as Literary Detective & Guide.

Set in the borderlands between Letterkenny and Derry-Londonderry, a landscape scarred by glacier, river and cartographer’s pen, the Ulster crime novelist, Brian McGilloway chronicles the challenges and fears of contemporary society. Following in the footsteps of Nordic and Tartan Noir, McGilloway re...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Keith McAllister, Colm Donnelly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: professionaldreamers 2024-03-01
Series:lo Squaderno
Online Access:http://www.losquaderno.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/losquaderno67.pdf#page=17
_version_ 1797317065981296640
author Keith McAllister
Colm Donnelly
author_facet Keith McAllister
Colm Donnelly
author_sort Keith McAllister
collection DOAJ
description Set in the borderlands between Letterkenny and Derry-Londonderry, a landscape scarred by glacier, river and cartographer’s pen, the Ulster crime novelist, Brian McGilloway chronicles the challenges and fears of contemporary society. Following in the footsteps of Nordic and Tartan Noir, McGilloway recognises the importance of the past in trying to reach an understanding of the present. His critique however goes beyond criminal behaviour motivated primarily by politics or religion, allowing a deeper and more meaningful diagnosis of the ‘state of the nation’. Place and event become especially important in contextualising the liminal in McGilloway’s rural borderland settings. In doing so, McGilloway continues in the rich tradition of the medieval Gaelic filid and the contemporary Ulster poet in trying to both chronicle and rationalise the man-made amidst the elemental, in this land of both Planter & Gael. Ritual, language, and the sacral are all instruments for investigation in helping McGilloway reveal an acute pathology of our times to his readers. Through his choice of chief protagonist, An Garda Síochána officer Benedict Devlin, McGilloway turns detective to critically investigate both the seemingly straightforward and the unseen lurking in the rural Ulster landscape; temporally and spatially, a place of displacement, loss and complicated histories, redolent and entwined with the ghosts of the past. Turning literary investigators, the authors contend that there is much to learn from this physiography, not just for the borderlands of North-West Ulster, but for the wider countryside and society beyond.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T03:28:35Z
format Article
id doaj.art-940408eea7154e538d80f936c2ed1d64
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1973-9141
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T03:28:35Z
publishDate 2024-03-01
publisher professionaldreamers
record_format Article
series lo Squaderno
spelling doaj.art-940408eea7154e538d80f936c2ed1d642024-02-11T07:59:08Zengprofessionaldreamerslo Squaderno1973-91412024-03-0119671721Reading the (in)-between-(in) the Borderlands of North-West Ulster: Brian McGilloway as Literary Detective & Guide.Keith McAllister 0Colm Donnelly1Queen’s University of BelfastQueen’s University of BelfastSet in the borderlands between Letterkenny and Derry-Londonderry, a landscape scarred by glacier, river and cartographer’s pen, the Ulster crime novelist, Brian McGilloway chronicles the challenges and fears of contemporary society. Following in the footsteps of Nordic and Tartan Noir, McGilloway recognises the importance of the past in trying to reach an understanding of the present. His critique however goes beyond criminal behaviour motivated primarily by politics or religion, allowing a deeper and more meaningful diagnosis of the ‘state of the nation’. Place and event become especially important in contextualising the liminal in McGilloway’s rural borderland settings. In doing so, McGilloway continues in the rich tradition of the medieval Gaelic filid and the contemporary Ulster poet in trying to both chronicle and rationalise the man-made amidst the elemental, in this land of both Planter & Gael. Ritual, language, and the sacral are all instruments for investigation in helping McGilloway reveal an acute pathology of our times to his readers. Through his choice of chief protagonist, An Garda Síochána officer Benedict Devlin, McGilloway turns detective to critically investigate both the seemingly straightforward and the unseen lurking in the rural Ulster landscape; temporally and spatially, a place of displacement, loss and complicated histories, redolent and entwined with the ghosts of the past. Turning literary investigators, the authors contend that there is much to learn from this physiography, not just for the borderlands of North-West Ulster, but for the wider countryside and society beyond. http://www.losquaderno.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/losquaderno67.pdf#page=17
spellingShingle Keith McAllister
Colm Donnelly
Reading the (in)-between-(in) the Borderlands of North-West Ulster: Brian McGilloway as Literary Detective & Guide.
lo Squaderno
title Reading the (in)-between-(in) the Borderlands of North-West Ulster: Brian McGilloway as Literary Detective & Guide.
title_full Reading the (in)-between-(in) the Borderlands of North-West Ulster: Brian McGilloway as Literary Detective & Guide.
title_fullStr Reading the (in)-between-(in) the Borderlands of North-West Ulster: Brian McGilloway as Literary Detective & Guide.
title_full_unstemmed Reading the (in)-between-(in) the Borderlands of North-West Ulster: Brian McGilloway as Literary Detective & Guide.
title_short Reading the (in)-between-(in) the Borderlands of North-West Ulster: Brian McGilloway as Literary Detective & Guide.
title_sort reading the in between in the borderlands of north west ulster brian mcgilloway as literary detective guide
url http://www.losquaderno.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/losquaderno67.pdf#page=17
work_keys_str_mv AT keithmcallister readingtheinbetweenintheborderlandsofnorthwestulsterbrianmcgillowayasliterarydetectiveguide
AT colmdonnelly readingtheinbetweenintheborderlandsofnorthwestulsterbrianmcgillowayasliterarydetectiveguide