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Charles Robert Maturin and the haunting of Irish romantic Fiction
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20 October 2011

LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Fiction: general and literary, LITERARY CRITICISM / Gothic & Romance, Literature: history and criticism, Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Illuminating
...a welcome addition to Maturin criticism.
What is it about Ireland's past that haunts the imagination? To an extent every Irish authorhas raised that question, but none other than Maturin has given it, as Morin reveals, such a vast array of complex and troubling answers.
This book is valuable for scholars interested in Irish romanticism, and in the Gothic more generally, and through its intelligent analysis of Maturin’s novels will no doubt succeed in its attempt to ‘raise’ his literary ghost.
Overall, Morin’s work offers an impassioned sense of the importance of Maturin’s haunting presence in our literary history. Her conclusion offers a survey of Maturin’s influence on writers from Baudelaire to John Banville, and a call for the source of that influence to be better understood. This volume is an important contribution to that project.
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Chronology of Maturin’s life
Introduction: Spectres of Maturin; or, the ghosts of Irish Romantic fiction
1. Reviving Maturin: the life and works
2. Communing with the dead: the medium and media of Fatal revenge
3. Conjuring Glorvina: The wild Irish boy and the national tale
4. Witnessing the past: the textual ruins of The Milesian chief
5. Narrating history: the burden of words in Women; or pour et contre
6. Paratextual possession: re-reading Melmoth the wanderer
7. Re-thinking Scott’s revolution: The Albigenses as historical novel
Conclusion: Room for more: the future for Maturin research
Select bibliography
Index