The new Irish narrative: Unruly and centered around the inner self
Briefly

Maggie O'Farrell admires Joyce's Ulysses for its depth, noting that despite its complexity, it opens numerous interpretative and experiential pathways for readers.
Sally Rooney elaborates that Ulysses demonstrates how literature can yield transformative new texts from misreadings, subsequently enlightening readers about their existence and choices.
Luis Solano highlights the evolution of Irish literature from individual introspection, prompted by Joyce, into a collective experience, blurring the lines with global narratives.
Solano observes that contemporary Irish literature holds universal relevance, contrasting it with American localism, which is often more isolating and less relatable in global contexts.
Read at english.elpais.com
[
]
[
|
]