Archival Suspicion and Authorial Desire in The Dalkey Archive

The central aim of this article is to explore the politics of the archive and archival mnemonics in Flann O’Brien’s last novel, The Dalkey Archive (1964). The argumentative axis moves along the relation between archival power and authorial agency, especially in terms of re/imagining alternative his...

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Main Author: Gülden Hatipoğlu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The English Language and Literature Research Association of Türkiye 2023-04-01
Series:Ideas: Journal of English Literary Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/2825660
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author Gülden Hatipoğlu
author_facet Gülden Hatipoğlu
author_sort Gülden Hatipoğlu
collection DOAJ
description The central aim of this article is to explore the politics of the archive and archival mnemonics in Flann O’Brien’s last novel, The Dalkey Archive (1964). The argumentative axis moves along the relation between archival power and authorial agency, especially in terms of re/imagining alternative histories/archives. Relying on the metaphor of the book as an archive, and the author as an archivist, the article introduces a reading of the novel within the historical context of Ireland’s post-independence intellectual and political climate. O’Brien’s biting dark humour, which exposes the ideological fictionality of archival constructs and debunks canonical authority, is shown to introduce a critical commentary on many aspects of the relationship between authorship and power.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2757-9549
language English
publishDate 2023-04-01
publisher The English Language and Literature Research Association of Türkiye
record_format Article
series Ideas: Journal of English Literary Studies
spelling doaj-art-f7b53e5593f742d891aeb73fbf9e5c9c2025-01-05T19:23:30ZengThe English Language and Literature Research Association of TürkiyeIdeas: Journal of English Literary Studies2757-95492023-04-01313143Archival Suspicion and Authorial Desire in The Dalkey ArchiveGülden Hatipoğlu0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6792-1427Ege University The central aim of this article is to explore the politics of the archive and archival mnemonics in Flann O’Brien’s last novel, The Dalkey Archive (1964). The argumentative axis moves along the relation between archival power and authorial agency, especially in terms of re/imagining alternative histories/archives. Relying on the metaphor of the book as an archive, and the author as an archivist, the article introduces a reading of the novel within the historical context of Ireland’s post-independence intellectual and political climate. O’Brien’s biting dark humour, which exposes the ideological fictionality of archival constructs and debunks canonical authority, is shown to introduce a critical commentary on many aspects of the relationship between authorship and power.https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/2825660flann o’brienthe dalkey archiveauthorshiparchivemnemonicsalternative histories
spellingShingle Gülden Hatipoğlu
Archival Suspicion and Authorial Desire in The Dalkey Archive
Ideas: Journal of English Literary Studies
flann o’brien
the dalkey archive
authorship
archive
mnemonics
alternative histories
title Archival Suspicion and Authorial Desire in The Dalkey Archive
title_full Archival Suspicion and Authorial Desire in The Dalkey Archive
title_fullStr Archival Suspicion and Authorial Desire in The Dalkey Archive
title_full_unstemmed Archival Suspicion and Authorial Desire in The Dalkey Archive
title_short Archival Suspicion and Authorial Desire in The Dalkey Archive
title_sort archival suspicion and authorial desire in the dalkey archive
topic flann o’brien
the dalkey archive
authorship
archive
mnemonics
alternative histories
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/2825660
work_keys_str_mv AT guldenhatipoglu archivalsuspicionandauthorialdesireinthedalkeyarchive