Résumés
Abstract
“From Egypt to Ireland: Lady Augusta Gregory and Cross-Cultural Nationalisms in Victorian Ireland” argues that Gregory promoted women’s political activism by adapting and exploiting the ways that nineteenth-century Irish nationalists drew upon African and Asian cultures to forge new understandings of Irishness. Gregory turned to representations of an Egyptian nationalist and his family to advocate links between domestic space and political action, a proposition that underscored Gregory’s elite class position, but also revealed the potential of the essay form to revise assumptions about gender that had calcified in other prevalent genres of Victorian Ireland.
Parties annexes
Works Cited
- Berdine, Michael D. The Accidental Tourist, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, and the British Invasion of Egypt in 1882. New York: Routledge, 2005.
- Coxhead, Elizabeth. Lady Gregory: A Literary Portrait. 2nd ed. London: Secker & Warburg, 1966.
- Cullingford, Elizabeth Butler. “‘Thinking of her ... as... Ireland’: Yeats, Pearse and Heaney.” Textual Practice 4 (1990): 1-21.
- Deane, Seamus. Strange Country: Modernity and Nationhood in Irish Writing Since 1790. Oxford: Clarendon, 1997.
- Easley, Alexis. First-Person Anonymous: Women Writers and Victorian Print Media, 1830-70. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2004.
- Gregory, Lady Augusta. “The Felons of Our Land.” 1900. Rpt. in Lady Gregory: Selected Writings. Ed. Lucy McDiarmid and Maureen Waters. London: Penguin, 1995. 254-69.
- Gregory, Lady Augusta. A Phantom’s Pilgrimage; Or, Home Ruin. London: W. Ridgway, 1893.
- Gregory, Lady Augusta. Arabi and His Household. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, & Co., 1882.
- Hall, Wayne E. Dialogues in the Margin: A Study of the Dublin University Magazine. Washington, D.C.: The Catholic U of America P, 1999.
- Kohfeldt, Mary Lou. Lady Gregory: The Woman Behind the Irish Renaissance. London: André Deutsch, 1985.
- Leerssen, Joep. “Irish Studies and Orientalism: Ireland and the Orient.” Oriental Prospects: Western Literature and the Lure of the East. Ed. C. C. Barfoot and Theo D’haen. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Rodopi, 1998. 161-73.
- Lennon, Joseph. Irish Orientalism: A Literary and Intellectual History. Syracuse: Syracuse UP, 2004.
- Lewis, Reina. Gendering Orientalism: Race, Femininity and Representation. New York: Routledge, 1996.
- Longford, Elizabeth. “Lady Gregory and Wilfrid Scawen Blunt.” Lady Gregory, Fifty Years After. Ed. Ann Saddlemyer and Colin Smythe. Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire: Colin Smythe, 1987. 85-97.
- Mayer, Thomas. The Changing Past: Egyptian Historiography of the Urabi Revolt, 1882-1983. Gainesville, FL: U of Florida P, 1988.
- Smythe, Colin. “Lady Gregory’s Contributions to Periodicals: A Checklist.” Lady Gregory, Fifty Years After. Ed. Ann Saddlemyer and Colin Smythe. Gerrard’s Cross, Buckinghamshire: Colin Smythe, 1987. 322-45. The Times. London, England. Letters to the Editor: 4 July 1882, 5 July 1882, and 30 October, 1882.
- Yeats, William Butler. Cathleen ni Houlihan. 1902. Modern Irish Drama. Ed. John P. Harrington. New York: Norton, 1991. 3-11.