Half-Formed Modernism: Eimear McBride’s A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing
Half-Formed Modernism: Eimear McBride’s A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing
Author(s): Aran Ward SellSubject(s): Cultural history, Social history, Theory of Literature, British Literature, Sociology of Literature
Published by: Debreceni Egyetem
Keywords: Irish culture; Celtic Tiger; 2008 financial crash; late capitalism; neoliberalism; economic boom; social inequality; post-Cold War; cultural critique; Joe Cleary;
Summary/Abstract: This paper positions Eimear McBride’s novel A Girl is a Half-Formed Thing (2013) at the vanguard of a resurgent modernism in the 21st-century Irish novel, in the wake of the 2007-08 financial crash. It asserts the value of experimental literature to a country which has awoken from a dream of late capitalist prosperity into a sobering confrontation with late capitalist crisis. McBride’s novel reproduces certain generic characteristics of the historical realism which was the dominant literary mode of Celtic Tiger Ireland. However, it also innovates: McBride’s new, fragmentary adaptation of Joycean stream-of-consciousness navigates its familiar themes through the internal states of its traumatized protagonist.
Journal: Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies
- Issue Year: 25/2019
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 393-413
- Page Count: 21
- Language: English
