Description
"Surveying a century of Irish adaptations from The Informer to Dancing at Lughnasa, Palmer, Conner, and ten other contributors celebrate a national cinema whose sources range far beyond Wilde and Shaw, a cinema with the power to raise pivotal questions that have obvious application to other national cinemas as well." (Thomas M. Leitch, author of "Adaptation and its Discontents" (2007)) "This timely and highly readable collection asks why the great flowering of Irish literature, at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, is strangely resistant to film adaptation and, by extension, why there is so little written about Irish literary cinema. This collection convincingly identifies and fills this gap in the field of Adaptation Studies. The collection engagingly demonstrates that it's high time we consider Irish film and literature as a group of texts that can be considered together while at the same time arguing how every example in the volume - from adaptations of the works of George Bernard Shaw to those of Roddy Doyle - invites and resists a monolithic notion of Irish literary cinema." (Deborah Cartmell, author of "A Companion to Literature, Film and Adaptation" (2012)) "The imaginative vibrancy of Irish cinema receives its rightful due in this critically shrewd, reliably witty and historically nuanced survey of film adaptations. Indispensable for anyone curious about or fascinated by how modern Irish drama and fiction have been translated to the screen." (Maria DiBattista, author of "Fast-talking Dames" (2001))
About the Author
R. Barton Palmer is the Calhoun Lemon Professor of Literature at Clemson University, where he also directs the World Cinema program. He is the author, editor, or general editor of more than seventy academic books in both literature and film studies. He directs book series at six university or scholarly presses, including (with Julie Grossman) Adaptation and Visual Culture at Palgrave Macmillan. He is the author or editor of several books on literature/film adaptation, including (with Grossman) the multi-author volume Adaptation in Visual Culture: Images, Texts, and Their Multiple Worlds (Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming).
Marc C. Conner is the Jo M. and James M. Ballengee Professor of English and Interim Provost at Washington and Lee. His books include The Aesthetics of Toni Morrison: Speaking the Unspeakable (2000), Charles Johnson: The Novelist as Philosopher (2007), The Poetry of James Joyce Reconsidered (2012), and The New Territory: Ralph Ellison and the Twenty-First Century, forthcoming (2016). In 2012 the Great Courses program released his 24-lecture series titled How to Read and Understand Shakespeare, and in 2016 they will release a 36-lecture series titled The Irish Identity: Independence, History, and Literature.
Book Information
ISBN 9783319409276
Author R. Barton Palmer
Format Hardback
Page Count 264
Imprint Springer International Publishing AG
Publisher Springer International Publishing AG
Series Palgrave Studies in Adaptation and Visual Culture
Weight(grams) 4653g