Julian Moynihan, W. B. Yeats and the End of Anglo-Irish Literature [198]; XI: After the End: The Anglo-Irish Postmortem [Chap. X], in Anglo-Irish: The Literary Imagination in a Hyphenated Culture ( Princeton UP 1995), pp.198-223;
CONTENTS: Acknowledgements, ix; Preface, xi. I: Prologue: Irish Enough [3]; II: Maria Edgeworth (1768-1849): Origination and a Checklist [12]; III: William Carleton (1794-1869): The Native Informer [43]. IV: Declensions of Anglo-Irish History: The Act of Union to the Encumbered Estates Acts of 1848-49 ... With a Glance at a Singular Heroine [74]; V: Charles Lever (1806-72): The Anglo-Irish Writer as Diplomatic Absentee. With a Glance at John Banim [84]; VI: The Politics of Anglo-Irish Gothic: Charles Robert Maturin, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, and the Return of the Repressed [109]; VII: History Again: The Era of Parnell - Myths and Realities [136]; VIII: Spinsters Ball: George Moore and the Land Agitation [144]; IX: The Strain of the Double Loyalty: Edith Somerville and Martin Ross [162]; X: W. B. Yeats and the End of Anglo-Irish Literature [198]; XI: After the End: The Anglo-Irish Postmortem [224]; Afterword [253]; Notes [257]; Works Cited [269]; Index [279].