TY - BOOK ID - 129183596 TI - Public works : infrastructure, Irish modernism, and the postcolonial PY - 2010 SN - 9780268040307 PB - Notre Dame (Ind.) : University of Notre Dame Press, DB - UniCat KW - Englisch. KW - Englische Literatur KW - Englische Literatur KW - English literature KW - English literature KW - English literature KW - English literature. KW - Infrastructure (Economics) in literature. KW - Infrastructure (Economics) in literature. KW - Literatur. KW - Modernism (Literature) KW - Modernism (Literature). KW - Modernismus. KW - Postcolonialism in literature. KW - Postcolonialism in literature. KW - Postkolonialismus. KW - Public utilities in literature. KW - Public utilities in literature. KW - Modernismus KW - Postkolonialismus KW - History and criticism KW - Irish authors KW - History and criticism. KW - Irish authors. KW - 1900-1999. KW - Ireland. KW - Irland. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:129183596 AB - " ... one of the most original and important contributions to Irish studies, and to a number of other fields as well, that has been written by a young scholar in recent years. It will be an important and much discussed book. It participates in, and outlines the future of, significant new directions in areas such as Irish studies, modernist studies, postcolonial studies, and the study of the relations among technology, materiality, and culture."--Marjorie Howes, Boston College" "Public Works, Michael Rubenstein's pathbreaking book, brilliantly explores relationships between modern èngineering cultures' and literary cultures. Juxtaposing literary texts and electric power generators, plays and water schemes, he offers us nothing less than a new way to read literary modernism's engagement with the real. His book represents a major intervention in postcolonial studies, uncovering new and pragmatic models of imagined community after colonialism. Additionally, Rubenstein's work marks a significant move in contemporary Irish studies by developing paradigms that help us read Ireland's postcolonial statehood in a global context. It also offers highly original readings of a series of Irish late-modernist writers, all in a timely and truly interdisciplinary project, beautifully done."--Enda Duffy, University of California, Santa Barbara." "Can you imagine a Joycean appeal for the payment of taxes? If you do not find it easy, you may be ready to take in the superb literary flair and pitch-perfect sense of present urgencies that puts Public Works at the sharpest edge of new scholarship. Michael Rubenstein makes a tiger's leap into the recent past, when the intimacy of the home had not yet learned to take for granted its connection to networks of electricity, gas, and water. He has written the book on the very hot topic of infrastructure, and he's done so while also figuring out a new direction for postcolonial studies. You will never be able to read Ulysses the same way again."--Bruce Robbins, Columbia University"--Jacket. ER -