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  • Home
  • Issues
    • 2010s
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    • ARCHIVE
      • IJAS ONLINE 2009-
      • IJAS 1992-2004
  • Articles
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    • The State Department’s Northern Ireland Special Envoys and the redemption of the Good Friday Agreement

      Richard Hargy
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    • “a settled place”: Reproductive Performance in the Liberties and The Liberties

      Lily Ní Dhomhnaill
    • ‘The Ethics of Quantum Colonialism’: Navigating American Racial Anxiety in N.K. Jemisin’s The City We Became

      Carolann North
    • “‘Normal People’ Indeed!”: Anne Tyler, Sally Rooney, and the Narrative of Youthful Quirk

      Cecilia Donohue
    • Depictions of Shame: White Identity and Cultural Blackness in Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom! and Styron’s Confessions of Nat Turner

      Beatrice Melodia Festa
    • Satire, Symbolism, and the “Working Through” of Historical Ghosts in The Confidence-Man

      Alex McDonnell
    • “The Product of a Spoiled America”: Divorce as Collective Crisis in U.S. Popular Culture of the 1990s

      Olga Thierbach-McLean
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      Ciarán Leinster
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      Gillian Groszewski
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      Eoin O'Callaghan
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      Courtney Mullis
    • Review: Christian Schmidt, Postblack Aesthetics: The Freedom to be Black in Contemporary African American Fiction.

      Jan Benes
    • Review: Wickham Clayton, ed, Style and Form in the Hollywood Slasher Film

      Noel O'Shea
    • Review: Kloeckner, Knewitz, and Sielke, eds., Knowledge Landscapes North America

      Natalia Kovalyova
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    • The IAAS's Americanista: An Interview with Catherine Gander (IAAS Chair)

      Caroline Schroeter and Sarah McCreedy
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    • From Mitchelstown to Michigan: Kevin Roche’s Formative Years

      Ellen Rowley
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    • Issue 11 2022
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READ MORE:
  • The State Department’s Northern Ireland Special Envoys and the redemption of the Good Friday Agreement
  • “a settled place”: Reproductive Performance in the Liberties and The Liberties
  • Review: Austenfeld, ed., Robert Lowell in a New Century
  • Review: Wills, Gamer Nation: Video Games and American Culture

Author Clare Hayes-Brady

Clare Hayes-Brady

Clare Hayes-Brady is Lecturer in American Literature at University College Dublin and Secretary of the Irish Association for American Studies. Her PhD focused on communication in the work of David Foster Wallace, and she has published and presented widely on aspects of contemporary American literature, with a particular focus on gender identity and voice.

David Foster Wallace and the Voices of a Fragmented Nation

“E Unibus Pluram”: David Foster Wallace and the Voices of a Fragmented Nation

Clare Hayes-Brady
Articles
One of the truisms of American studies seems to be the intrepid historylessness of the United States. De Tocqueville observed that democracy tended to “make each man forget his ancestors” (de Tocqueville 6), an... Read More...

Review: Kevin J. Hayes, A Journey Through American Literature

Clare Hayes-Brady
Reviews
Kevin J. Hayes, A Journey Through American Literature. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2012. A blurb on the back cover of Kevin J. Hayes’s A Journey Through American Literature describes the book as “like chatting with a o... Read More...
EISSN (2009-2377)