The Thriller and Northern Ireland since 1969: Utterly Resigned Terror

The Thriller and Northern Ireland since 1969: Utterly Resigned Terror

by Aaron Kelly
The Thriller and Northern Ireland since 1969: Utterly Resigned Terror

The Thriller and Northern Ireland since 1969: Utterly Resigned Terror

by Aaron Kelly

eBook

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Overview

For the past 30 years, the so-called 'Troubles' thriller has been the dominant fictional mode for representing Northern Ireland, leading to the charge that the crudity of this popular genre appropriately reflects the social degradation of the North. Aaron Kelly challenges both these judgments, showing that the historical questions raised by setting a thriller in Northern Ireland disrupt the conventions of the crime novel and allow for a new understanding of both the genre and the country. Two essays on crime fiction by Walter Benjamin and Berthold Brecht appear here for the first time in English translation. By demonstrating the relevance of these theorists as well as other key European thinkers such as Antonio Gramsci, Louis Althusser, and Slavoj Zizek to his interdisciplinary study of Irish culture and the crime novel, Kelly refutes the idea that Northern Ireland is a stagnate anomaly that has been bypassed by European history and remained impervious to cultural transformation. On the contrary, Kelly's examination of authors such as Jack Higgins, Tom Clancy, Gerald Seymour, Colin Bateman, and Eoin McNamee shows that profound historical change and complexity have characterized both Northern Ireland and the thriller form.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781351881111
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 03/02/2017
Series: Studies in European Cultural Transition
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Aaron Kelly is a Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary Literature in English at the University of Edinburgh, UK.

Table of Contents

Contents: Introduction: 'You didn't need a reason to kill people, not here': narrative, the north, and historical agency; 'The green unpleasant land': the political unconscious of the British 'Troubles' thriller; 'And what do you call it?': the thriller and the problematics of home in Northern Irish writing; 'New languages would have to be invented': representations of Belfast and urban space; 'A man could get lost': constructions of gender; 'It's not for the likes of us to philosophize': the pleasure and politics of thrills, or, towards a political aesthetics; Appendices; Bibliography; Index.
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