“A Company of Rogues”: Richard Head and the Irish Picaresque

Authors

  • David Clark University of A Coruña

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24162/EI2019-8771

Keywords:

Charles Lever, Crime fiction, picaresque, Richard Head, Spain, William Chaigneau

Abstract

Redefinitions of the origins of crime fiction have led to a renewed interest in earlier texts which do not follow the objective and empirical methods favoured by the standard Poe/Holmes canon of crime writing. As well as pre-modern enigma tales, early modern rogue narratives also provide an interesting field with which to reappraise the origins of the genre. Irish writing has a rich history of “rogue” narratives which, borrowing heavily from the Iberian picaresque tradition but adapting this to the particular circumstances of Ireland, provides a fascinating glimpse into the origins of Irish crime writing. Richard Head’s The English Rogue (1665) is of enormous importance as the first concerted application of Iberian picaresque models to an English-language context. The later use of the picaresque by William Chaigneau and Charles Lever would reveal how this Spanish model was uniquely adaptable to Irish circumstances and would influence both mainstream and crime narratives by Irish authors.

Author Biography

David Clark, University of A Coruña

David Clark was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, and is Senior Lecturer in English Studies at the University of Coruña. He has held executive positions in both national and international Associations for Irish Studies and has published widely on contemporary Irish and Scottish writing. He is Director of the “Amergin” University Institute for Irish Studies. He co-edited the volume of essays As Nove Ondas (2002) and is co-author, with Antonio de Toro, of the book British and Irish Writers in the Spanish Periodical Press (2007). He is currently working on a History of Irish Crime Fiction.

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Published

2019-03-17

How to Cite

David Clark. (2019). “A Company of Rogues”: Richard Head and the Irish Picaresque. Estudios Irlandeses, 14(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.24162/EI2019-8771