BachelorDragon.png

The bachelor programme Celtic Languages and Culture at Utrecht University is under threat.

Bibliography

Boyle, Elizabeth, “The poetics of irony in Middle Irish literature”, North American Journal of Celtic Studies 5:2 (Autumn, 2021): 194–213.

  • journal article
Citation details
Contributors
Article
“The poetics of irony in Middle Irish literature”
Periodical
North American Journal of Celtic Studies 5:2 (2021)
North American Journal of Celtic Studies 5:1–2 (Spring-Autumn, 2021), Ohio State University Press.
Volume
5
Pages
194–213
Description
Abstract (cited)

This article seeks to establish a poetics of irony in Early Middle Irish literature centring on anticlerical irreverence, misogyny, and ethnic stereotyping. Using a cluster of tenth-century narratives in the Book of Leinster, this study reads within and between texts to attempt to delineate conventions of genre and style which can be used to make the case for ironic readings of these and other texts. It is tentatively suggested that such anecdote-length humorous texts may have been used for pedagogical purposes, and the relationship between anticlerical texts and those which critique poets is briefly explored.

Subjects and topics
Sources
Manuscripts
Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
November 2022