When politics meets gender: trauma in Edna O’Brien’s House of Splendid Isolation
The signing of the contentious Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1921 was a traumatic experience for many Irish people. This is not only because of the ensuing Irish Civil War, but the psychological adjustments that the Irish people have to make in their partitioned land. Since the Irish Republican Army (IRA...
Main Author: | Chang, Tsung-chi |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
2017
|
Online Access: | http://journalarticle.ukm.my/11766/1/19244-63571-1-PB.pdf |
Similar Items
-
Amanda Greenwood: Edna O’Brien, Tavistock, Northcote House, 2003, 137 pp.
by: María Ángeles Pozo Montaño
Published: (2004-12-01) -
Nature as Space: Gender Roles and Subversion in Edna O’Brien’s “A Scandalous Woman”
by: Christopher Herman George
Published: (2021-12-01) -
A JAIL OR A REFUGE:
CATHOLIC CONVENT EDUCATION IN KATE
O’BRIEN’S THE LAND OF SPICES AND EDNA
O’BRIEN’S THE COUNTRY GIRLS
by: Vesna Ukić Košta
Published: (2013-01-01) -
Granuloma actinico de O'Brien O'Brien actinic granuloma
by: J A Gregoris, et al.
Published: (2009-03-01) -
Empathy in Exile: Edna O’Brien, Donal Ryan and the Contemporary Irish Novel
by: Kaitlin Thurlow
Published: (2020-06-01)