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Flann O'Brien: A Portrait of the Artist As a Young Post-Modernist
 
 
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Flann O'Brien: A Portrait of the Artist As a Young Post-Modernist [Hardcover]

Keith Hopper (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Flann O'Brien: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Post-Modernist Flann O'Brien: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Post-Modernist 5.0 out of 5 stars (2)
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Book Description

1859180418 978-1859180419 June 1995
Flann O’Brien’s The Third Policeman, completed in 1940, was initially rejected by his publishers for being "too fantastic", and only appeared posthumously in 1967. Since then O’Brien has achieved cult status, although critical appraisal of his work has focused almost exclusively on his first novel, At Swim Two Birds (1939). By 1940 O’Brien was confronted with two towering traditions: the jaded legacy of Yeats’s Celtic Twilight and the problematic complexities of Joyce’s modernism. With The Third Policeman, O’Brien forges a powerful synthesis between these two traditions, and the paraliterary path he chooses marks the historical transition from modernism to post-modernism.

This groundbreaking study, first published in 1995 and now substantially revised, reconfigures O’Brien as a highly subversive writer within a rich and fertile literary landscape: indisputably Irish yet distinctly post-modern. It identifies The Third Policeman as a subversive intellectual satire, in the cutting-edge tradition of Swift and Sterne, and situates it as one of the earliest – and most exciting – examples of post-modernist fiction.
--This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Hopper is a good explicator, his approach is illuminating and such enthusiasm for Flann O'Brien is infectious." --David Malcolm, Times Literary Supplement, October 30, 2009

"This study is impressive, even brilliant, in its scope, thoroughness, mastery, and persuasiveness. Not to be missed is its clear delineation of postmodernism as a valid and defined literary approach. Summing Up: Highly recommended." --R. R. Joly, CHOICE Reviews Online, October 2009

"Hopper is a good explicator, his approach is illuminating and such enthusiasm for Flann O'Brien is infectious." -- David Malcolm, Times Literary Supplement, October 30, 2009

"This study is impressive, even brilliant, in its scope, thoroughness, mastery, and persuasiveness. Not to be missed is its clear delineation of postmodernism as a valid and defined literary approach. Summing Up: Highly recommended." --R. R. Joly, CHOICE Reviews Online, October 2009 --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

About the Author

Keith Hopper teaches Literature and Film Studies for Oxford University’s Department for Continuing Education and for St Clare’s International College, Oxford. He is general editor of the Ireland into Film series (2001-2007). --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Cork Univ Pr (June 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1859180418
  • ISBN-13: 978-1859180419
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.7 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book about a misunderstood writer, June 15, 2000
Keith Hopper's study of Flann O'Brien is one of the very few essential works of Irish lit crit to be published in the last twenty years. Hopper's basic thesis is that O'Brien's most famous book, "At Swim-Two-Birds", is not his most brilliant and imaginative work. "At Swim", or "AS2B" as we O'Brien experts call it, is really a half-hearted venture in late modernism, spoiled by the author's diffidence, carelessness and sentimentality. He reaches his full powers in the savage black comedy "An Beal Bocht", which unfortunately for most people in the world was written in the Irish language, and the thoroughly eerie tale of robbery and guilt "The Third Policeman". Hopper shows how the latter book is one of the first full-blown works of postmodernism, a metafictional head-trip that prefigures Italo Calvino by about thirty years.

After the book was rejected a couple of times, O'Brien shoved the MS into a drawer (it wasn't published until after his death) and ended up frittering away his enormous talent in a decreasingly entertaining newspaper column, throwing off a couple of lame novels before his early death. It's a sad story, and Hugh Kenner has convincingly argued elsewhere that O'Brien himself was alarmed by the implications of "The Third Policeman" and made a conscious decision not to publish it.

Hopper's arguments about the status and significance of postmodernism in Ireland are a sorely-needed counter to the generally blandly realistic mode of fiction that has dominated Irish writing since Frank O'Connor got his first big royalty cheque. "The Third Policeman" is funnier, scarier and more profoundly alarming than any of John Banville's jeux de desespoirs (Banville always reads to me as though he's been translated from the Czech, anyway). An important and neglected book. Irish culture could be a lot more fun for everybody involved if Mr. Hopper had been listened to.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the importance of percussion, December 7, 2004
By 
Dr. Klamm (Austin, TX USA) - See all my reviews
Some commentators have argued that "The Third Policeman" is a riff on Einstein's theories of relativity, while others argue that the text is a Menippean satire that probes the limits of rational Western epistemology. Here, Hopper argues in a mostly persuasive fashion that "The Third Policeman" is a postmodern metafiction far surpassing "At Swim-Two-Birds" in cleverness and complexity, finding evidence in such areas as the obvious God-figure of Policeman Fox to the policemen's readings from Eternity, here startlingly explicated. Hopper's book is remarkably easy to read for an academic text, though I admit that by the end of the book I felt as if its points had been repeatedly hammered into my skull, perhaps by a special bicycle pump manufactured from a hollow iron bar. Incidentally, Le Clerque has drawn attention to the importance of percussion in the de Selby dialectic and shown that most of the physicist's experiments were extremely noisy. Unfortunately the hammering was always done behind closed doors and no commentator has hazarded a guess as to what was being hammered and for what purpose.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
This fractal pattern repeated itself through an entire wardrobe of hats, scarves, gloves and ribbons. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
third policeman, fictional zone, metafictional discourse, metonymic discourse, female bicycle, relativistic reading, serial universe, student narrator, intertextual source, middle dimensions, mimetic narrative, literary machine, menippean satire, formalist perspective, polyphonic composition, topographical arrangements, textual voice, projected world, primary narrative, biographical criticism, nameless narrator, comic tradition
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Flann O'Brien, Brian O'Nolan, Tristram Shandy, Old Mathers, Susan Stewart, The Dalkey Archive, Roland Barthes, New York, The Hard Life, Patricia Waugh, Timothy O'Keefe, Rudiger Imhof, Viktor Shklovsky, Anthony Cronin, James Joyce, Policeman Fox, Anne Clissmann, John Divney, Dermot Trellis, Finnegans Wake, Against Nature, Good Fairy, Laurence Sterne, Samuel Beckett, Wim Tigges
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