Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/8545
Título
Thematic Transgressions and Formal Innovations in Edna O’Brien’s The Country Girls Trilogy and Epilogue
Publicado en
Estudios Irlandeses. 2018, n. 13.2, p. 77-89
Editorial
Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses
Fecha de publicación
2018
ISSN
1699-311X
DOI
10.24162/EI2018-8623
Abstract
The paradigmatic literary work of Edna O’Brien, The Country Girls Trilogy and Epilogue (1986) narrates the coming of age of two young women from rural backgrounds in the Ireland of the mid-twentieth century and their progressive entry into an adult world, passing through the capital, Dublin, to finally leave their country and arrive in London. Censured in its day, the trilogy is now acknowledged as a feminine Bildungsroman, above all, because of its open allusions to the awakening of female sexuality. However, most criticism has overlooked the political implications of its central theme, as well as the structural and formal innovations that the author employs to represent the impossibility of a feminine Bildung form. Polyphony, fragmentation, and ultimate disintegration are some of the elements that evidence the need to reconsider the place of the trilogy within the panorama of Irish literature.
Palabras clave
Edna O'Brien
Transgression
Narrative Voice
Anti-bildungsroman
Materia
Literatura irlandesa
Irish literature
Versión del editor
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