This book illuminates how the ‘long eighteenth century’ (1660-1800) persists in our present through screen and performance media, writing and visual art. Tracing the afterlives of the period from the 1980s to the present, it argues that these emerging and changing forms stage the period as a point of origin for the grounding of individual identity in personal memory, and as a site of foundational traumas that shape cultural memory.
Inhoudsopgave
Acknowledgements.- 1.Introduction – Theatres of Memory.- 2.Restorations.- 3.‘Ever-haunting Hogarth’: Remembering the Hogarthian Progress.- 4.Emma Donoghue’s Enlightenment Fictions.- 5.Memory and Enlightenment in the Poetry of Eavan Boland and Medbh Mc Guckian.- 6.
The Recruiting Officer in the Penal Colony.- 7.Memory and Atrocity: Representing the
Zong.-8.Conclusion.- Bibliography.
Over de auteur
James Ward is a Lecturer in Early Modern English Literature at Ulster University, Northern Ireland, UK.