Journeys in Ireland: Literary Travellers, Rural Landscapes, Cultural RelationsThis volume offers a reasoned critical account of a wide range of travel writing about rural Ireland. The focus is on work by English travellers who visited Ireland for pleasure, from the 'scenic tourists' of the post-Romantic period to Eric Newby in the 1980s. Ryle also discusses accounts by American and English anthropologists, as well as writing by Irish authors including J.M. Synge, George Moore, Sean O'Faolain and Colm TÃ3ibÃ-n. The materials reviewed and discussed here, including many books which are now difficult to find, offer illuminating and sometimes entertaining evidence about the development of tourism. Ryle also shows how the discourses and practices of pleasurable travel have intersected with and been marked by the dimensions of power and proprietorship, hegemony, and resistance, which have characterised Anglo-Irish and Hiberno-English cultural relations over the last two centuries. Journeys in Ireland will interest all those concerned with the literature and history of those relations, and will be an invaluable resource for scholars, teachers and students concerned with travel writing and tourism with and beyond these islands. |
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Page 45
... Perhaps the best - known example of this way of seeing the West of Ireland is Flaherty's ' documentary ' film , Man of Aran ( 1934 ) , set in the terrain of Synge's topographical work on The Aran Islands ( 1906 ) . Pat Mullen , who had ...
... Perhaps the best - known example of this way of seeing the West of Ireland is Flaherty's ' documentary ' film , Man of Aran ( 1934 ) , set in the terrain of Synge's topographical work on The Aran Islands ( 1906 ) . Pat Mullen , who had ...
Page 71
... perhaps , is Henry Inglis's comparison of the hereditary landowner Jack Joyce of Killary Harbour to ' a king of one of the South - sea islands ' : but this is facetious : Inglis seems indeed to be belittling whatever claims might be ...
... perhaps , is Henry Inglis's comparison of the hereditary landowner Jack Joyce of Killary Harbour to ' a king of one of the South - sea islands ' : but this is facetious : Inglis seems indeed to be belittling whatever claims might be ...
Page 81
... perhaps another index of his position as an outsider that for Synge , the islands are a place where what is ' primitive ' is also what is good . Being rowed in a curragh out from Aranmor towards Inishmaan ' where Gaelic is more ...
... perhaps another index of his position as an outsider that for Synge , the islands are a place where what is ' primitive ' is also what is good . Being rowed in a curragh out from Aranmor towards Inishmaan ' where Gaelic is more ...
Contents
Knowledge Amusement and Unprofitable Tours | 13 |
Ethnographers Travellers and Decline in the West | 45 |
Into the West | 63 |
Copyright | |
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agricultural already Aran Barrow beauty become Border British Brody Bulfin called chapter Connemara countryside course cultural described discussion Dublin economic England English English travellers enjoy especially Famine feel figure Gaelic Galway Gibbons gives ground Hall Hogg holiday ibid important industrial Inglis Ireland Irish Islands John journey Joyce kind lake land landscape late later less literary live London look Lough material means Moore Morton nationalist natural nineteenth century notes offer once perhaps pleasure political poor poverty present Press readers recent record reference reflects representation represented revival road rural says scene scenic seen sense Shannon social suggests Synge Synge's taken texts Thackeray Tóibín Tour tourists town tradition village visitors West writing