Dialogues in the margin : a study of the Dublin University magazine

1999 
For decades, commentators on 19th-century Irish literature of history have routinely mentioned the significance of the "Dublin University Magazine". Published monthly from January 1833 to December 1877, the "DUM" attracted as its contributors - and in several cases its editors - nearly every major Irish writer from this period. Prior to Wayne E. Hall's "Dialogues in the Margin", however, there has been no systematic, book-length discussion of the magazine's entire career. In his study, Hall traces the dual nature of the magazine, its attention to both England and Ireland, which helps us to understand the sometimes guilty and reluctant, sometimes celebratory and passionate, union of these different cultural traditions and values. The "DUM" expressed a complex brand of Irish national identity that defined itself partly in cultural and partly in political terms. In seeking its own balance between excluding and including, between culture and politics, the "DUM" developed one main pattern in its pages: the magazine's political commentary stakes out the ideological ground with varying degrees of rigidity and exclusivity, while its literary contributions expand the magazine's total scope to embrace a much wider and more generous vision of "Irishness". Within the terms and tensions of the "DUM"'s journalistic dialogue, then, readers can see the political and the literary values jostling against each other. The magazine serves as a detailed and thorough record of conservative political thought in the 19th century, and also shows that Irish political events have drawn much of their shape from the literature, even as that literature was being shaped in turn by politics.
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