This seminar will examine a range of contemporary Irish novels and short stories, published since 2010. We will investigate the thematic preoccupations of contemporary Irish fiction, writers' formal innovations and their ongoing reception by readers in a variety of fora (online media, printed media, etc) The course will include a range of short stories including work by Colin Barrett, Nicole Flattery and Melatu Uche Okorie, two short novels by Claire Keegan, and recent novels by Mike McCormack, Sally Rooney, Soula Emmanuel and Anne Enright (the most recent being Soula Emmanuel, Wild Geese, published March 2023 and Anne Enright, The Wren, The Wren, published September 2023).
A key theme of this course is the reception and influence of contemporary Irish fiction: using resources such as https://contemporaryirishwriting.ie/ we will discuss how authors' reputations are shaped by the early critical reception of their works; how literary works are circulated and made known to audiences; the role and significance of readers and audiences; and the growing importance of genre fiction and texts that challenge existing narrative genres.
Reading List:
Colin Barrett, Homesickness (Vintage, 2022)
Soula Emmanuel, Wild Geese (Footnote Press, 2023)
Anne Enright, The Wren, The Wren (Penguin, 2023)
Nicole Flattery, Show Them a Good Time (Stinging Fly, 2019)
Claire Keegan, Foster (Faber, 2010); or online at New Yorker - https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/02/15/foster
Claire Keegan, Small Things Like These (Faber, 2020)
Mike McCormack, Solar Bones (Tramp Press, 2016)
Sally Rooney, Conversations With Friends (Faber, 2017)
Melatu Uche Okorie, This Hostel Life (Skein Press, 2018)
PLEASE NOTE that the School of English, Drama and Film reserves the right to withdraw modules in the period up to and including the first week of the teaching trimester