Introducción: Eco-ficciones, la metáfora animal y los estudios irlandeses

Autores/as

  • Margarita Estévez-Saá Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
  • Manuela Palacios-González Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
  • Noemí Pereira-Ares Universidade de Santiago de Compostela

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24162/EI2020-9716

Resumen

Nature, animals, the landscape and the environment have enjoyed a recurrent presence and have indeed been constant protagonists in Irish literature and culture. The wild isolated island, originally feared or even despised by foreigners, progressively became that romanticised, pre-modern Arcadia imagined by tourists from the early twentieth century onwards. The once desolated and barren landscapes of the Great Hunger were imaginatively recreated as green pastures, nostalgically conjured up by nineteenth- and twentieth-century Irish emigrants across the world. More recently, during the decades of the economic boom, the Irish land of the Celtic Tiger was plundered mercilessly by unscrupulous property developers, and its historical sites and natural resources were appropriated as commodities for tourism. These are just some examples of the many uses and abuses of the Irish environment in the recent cultural history of the island.

Biografía del autor/a

Margarita Estévez-Saá, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela

Margarita Estévez-Saá is Senior Lecturer of English and American Literature at the Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Her research interests include the work of James Joyce and, more recently, contemporary Irish fiction by women. She has published essays in which she studies the topic of immigration in recent Irish fiction, such as “Antidotes to Celtic Tiger Ireland in Contemporary Irish Fiction: Anne Haverty’s The Free and the Easy and Éillís Ní Dhuibne’s Fox, Swallow, Scarecrow” (2010) and “Immigration in Celtic Tiger and post-Celtic Tiger Novels” (2013). She has also read contemporary novels in English from a transcultural perspective in “Trauma and Transculturalism in Contemporary Fictional Memories of the 9/11 Terrorist Attacks” (2016) and “‘Us returniks’: Transcultural Atlantic Exchanges in Mary Rose Callaghan’s and Elizabeth Wassell’s Novels” (2018). More recently, she has co-edited with María Jesús Lorenzo-Modia the volume The Ethics and Aesthetics of Eco-caring: Contemporary Debates on Ecofeminism(s) (Routledge, 2019).

Manuela Palacios-González, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela

Manuela Palacios-González is Senior Lecturer of English at the University of Santiago de Compostela in Spain. She has directed five research projects on contemporary Irish and Galician literature that have been funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science, and has edited and co-edited several books in relation to this topic: Pluriversos (2003), Palabras extremas (2008), Writing Bonds (2009), Creation, Publishing and Criticism (2010), To the Winds Our Sails (2010), Forked Tongues (2012), Six Galician Poets (2016), Migrant Shores (2017) and Ανθολογία Νέων Γαλικιανών Ποιητών – Antoloxía De Poesía Galega Nova (2019). Her other publications include translations of European and Arabic poetry and fiction, a monograph on Virginia Woolf’s pictorial imagery, Shakespeare’s Richard III, and articles on ecocriticism.

Noemí Pereira-Ares, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela

Noemí Pereira-Ares works in the Department of English, at the University of A Coruña. She graduated from the University of A Coruña in 2009 and received an MA in English Studies (2010) and a PhD in English Literature (2015) from the University of Santiago de Compostela. Her research interests include migrant literature(s) in English, postcolonial, diaspora and transcultural studies, and the sociological study of dress in literature. Her work has appeared in international peer-reviewed journals such as The Journal of Postcolonial Writing and Journal of Commonwealth Literature, and she has recently published a monograph entitled Fashion, Dress and Identity in the Narratives of the South Asian Diaspora: From the Eighteenth Century to Monica Ali (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018).

Publicado

31-10-2020

Cómo citar

Estévez-Saá, M., Manuela Palacios-González, & Noemí Pereira-Ares. (2020). Introducción: Eco-ficciones, la metáfora animal y los estudios irlandeses. Estudios Irlandeses, 15(2), 1–5. https://doi.org/10.24162/EI2020-9716