Disrupting Colonial Views: Savvy Nabobs, Oriental Dreams. Colonial Appropriations in J.C. Mangan’s “An Extraordinary Adventure in the Shades” and “The Thirty Flasks”

Irish Gothic fiction in the nineteenth century experiences a significant yet progressive change – a move from the more brutal, physical threat present in the early forms of the genre to that of a subtle, psychological menace. Read in postcolonial terms, this signifies a change in the presence and pe...

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Main Author: Richard Jorge Fernández
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses 2020-03-01
Series:Estudios Irlandeses
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/DEF-JORGE.pdf
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spelling doaj-eb2cc6ed878b47089a5213f005cf7ebf2020-11-25T02:56:35ZengAsociación Española de Estudios IrlandesesEstudios Irlandeses1699-311X1699-311X2020-03-01151539509310Disrupting Colonial Views: Savvy Nabobs, Oriental Dreams. Colonial Appropriations in J.C. Mangan’s “An Extraordinary Adventure in the Shades” and “The Thirty Flasks”Richard Jorge Fernández0 European University of the Atlantic, Spain Irish Gothic fiction in the nineteenth century experiences a significant yet progressive change – a move from the more brutal, physical threat present in the early forms of the genre to that of a subtle, psychological menace. Read in postcolonial terms, this signifies a change in the presence and perception of the colonized other, who now is presented as a mental danger; thus, vampires, werewolves and other physically threatening beings are left in the vault while, simultaneously, a new form of threat emerges in the shape of beings whose physical presence is conspicuously less hostile but whose psychological sphere threatens to engulf the troubled Anglo-Irish elite. The narratives of J.C. Mangan are paradigmatic of this change in so far as they already present the characteristics which later writers of the genre were to deploy. As this paper shows, by appropriating and abrogating the colonial gaze and utilizing British/Anglo-Irish perceptions of the East, J.C. Mangan manages to unveil the fact that, ultimately, Anglo-Irish fears of the Catholic other are, in fact, a product of their own paranoia, therefore, debasing their claim to both land and their appropriation of Irish identity.https://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/DEF-JORGE.pdfpostcolonialismj.c. manganirish literaturenineteenth-century literaturegothicanglo-irish ascendancy.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richard Jorge Fernández
spellingShingle Richard Jorge Fernández
Disrupting Colonial Views: Savvy Nabobs, Oriental Dreams. Colonial Appropriations in J.C. Mangan’s “An Extraordinary Adventure in the Shades” and “The Thirty Flasks”
Estudios Irlandeses
postcolonialism
j.c. mangan
irish literature
nineteenth-century literature
gothic
anglo-irish ascendancy.
author_facet Richard Jorge Fernández
author_sort Richard Jorge Fernández
title Disrupting Colonial Views: Savvy Nabobs, Oriental Dreams. Colonial Appropriations in J.C. Mangan’s “An Extraordinary Adventure in the Shades” and “The Thirty Flasks”
title_short Disrupting Colonial Views: Savvy Nabobs, Oriental Dreams. Colonial Appropriations in J.C. Mangan’s “An Extraordinary Adventure in the Shades” and “The Thirty Flasks”
title_full Disrupting Colonial Views: Savvy Nabobs, Oriental Dreams. Colonial Appropriations in J.C. Mangan’s “An Extraordinary Adventure in the Shades” and “The Thirty Flasks”
title_fullStr Disrupting Colonial Views: Savvy Nabobs, Oriental Dreams. Colonial Appropriations in J.C. Mangan’s “An Extraordinary Adventure in the Shades” and “The Thirty Flasks”
title_full_unstemmed Disrupting Colonial Views: Savvy Nabobs, Oriental Dreams. Colonial Appropriations in J.C. Mangan’s “An Extraordinary Adventure in the Shades” and “The Thirty Flasks”
title_sort disrupting colonial views: savvy nabobs, oriental dreams. colonial appropriations in j.c. mangan’s “an extraordinary adventure in the shades” and “the thirty flasks”
publisher Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses
series Estudios Irlandeses
issn 1699-311X
1699-311X
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Irish Gothic fiction in the nineteenth century experiences a significant yet progressive change – a move from the more brutal, physical threat present in the early forms of the genre to that of a subtle, psychological menace. Read in postcolonial terms, this signifies a change in the presence and perception of the colonized other, who now is presented as a mental danger; thus, vampires, werewolves and other physically threatening beings are left in the vault while, simultaneously, a new form of threat emerges in the shape of beings whose physical presence is conspicuously less hostile but whose psychological sphere threatens to engulf the troubled Anglo-Irish elite. The narratives of J.C. Mangan are paradigmatic of this change in so far as they already present the characteristics which later writers of the genre were to deploy. As this paper shows, by appropriating and abrogating the colonial gaze and utilizing British/Anglo-Irish perceptions of the East, J.C. Mangan manages to unveil the fact that, ultimately, Anglo-Irish fears of the Catholic other are, in fact, a product of their own paranoia, therefore, debasing their claim to both land and their appropriation of Irish identity.
topic postcolonialism
j.c. mangan
irish literature
nineteenth-century literature
gothic
anglo-irish ascendancy.
url https://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/DEF-JORGE.pdf
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