This article offers an outline and preliminary analyses of key aspects of Lisa Baraitser'... more This article offers an outline and preliminary analyses of key aspects of Lisa Baraitser's (2009) Maternal Encounters as a situating opening piece in a special feature arising from an intensive seminar on Baraitser's work held in Dublin in September 2010. The first section opens out some of the psychoanalytic implications of Baraitser's theory of maternal subjectivity. The second section considers
The shape of the nation as both real and imagined space depends on the “strangers” who mark the i... more The shape of the nation as both real and imagined space depends on the “strangers” who mark the internal and external limits of the “skin” that keeps it in place. From the perspective of the “we” assumed as the constitutive parts of the national body, the “stranger” is she who is already constituted as such on her arrival at the border— whether the physical borders of the juridical state or the internal bor-
Pre-publication draft
Published in: A History of Modern Irish Women's Literature. Eds Heather Ing... more Pre-publication draft Published in: A History of Modern Irish Women's Literature. Eds Heather Ingham and Clíona O Gallchóir. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Pre-publication draft
Published in After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, Racism and Free Speech. Eds Gavan... more Pre-publication draft Published in After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, Racism and Free Speech. Eds Gavan Titley, Des Freedman, Gholam Khiabany and Aurélien Mondon (London: Zed Books, 2017)
In Noreen Giffney and Margrit Shildrick (eds), Theory on the Edge: Irish Studies and the Politics of Sexual Difference (essays in honour of Ailbhe Smyth) (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2013)., 2013
This article offers an outline and preliminary analyses of key aspects of Lisa Baraitser'... more This article offers an outline and preliminary analyses of key aspects of Lisa Baraitser's (2009) Maternal Encounters as a situating opening piece in a special feature arising from an intensive seminar on Baraitser's work held in Dublin in September 2010. The first section opens out some of the psychoanalytic implications of Baraitser's theory of maternal subjectivity. The second section considers
The shape of the nation as both real and imagined space depends on the “strangers” who mark the i... more The shape of the nation as both real and imagined space depends on the “strangers” who mark the internal and external limits of the “skin” that keeps it in place. From the perspective of the “we” assumed as the constitutive parts of the national body, the “stranger” is she who is already constituted as such on her arrival at the border— whether the physical borders of the juridical state or the internal bor-
Pre-publication draft
Published in: A History of Modern Irish Women's Literature. Eds Heather Ing... more Pre-publication draft Published in: A History of Modern Irish Women's Literature. Eds Heather Ingham and Clíona O Gallchóir. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Pre-publication draft
Published in After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, Racism and Free Speech. Eds Gavan... more Pre-publication draft Published in After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, Racism and Free Speech. Eds Gavan Titley, Des Freedman, Gholam Khiabany and Aurélien Mondon (London: Zed Books, 2017)
In Noreen Giffney and Margrit Shildrick (eds), Theory on the Edge: Irish Studies and the Politics of Sexual Difference (essays in honour of Ailbhe Smyth) (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2013)., 2013
Uploads
Books by Anne Mulhall
Papers by Anne Mulhall
Published in: A History of Modern Irish Women's Literature. Eds Heather Ingham and Clíona O Gallchóir. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Published in After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, Racism and Free Speech. Eds Gavan Titley, Des Freedman, Gholam Khiabany and Aurélien Mondon (London: Zed Books, 2017)
Published in: A History of Modern Irish Women's Literature. Eds Heather Ingham and Clíona O Gallchóir. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Published in After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, Racism and Free Speech. Eds Gavan Titley, Des Freedman, Gholam Khiabany and Aurélien Mondon (London: Zed Books, 2017)