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Lord Dunsany of the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers.
 

There are 6 critical essays on Edward Plunkett, 18th Baron Dunsany.

Critical Essays on Edward Plunkett, 18th Baron Dunsany
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Critical Essay by S. T. Joshi
13,897 words, approx. 46 pages
An American editor and critic, Joshi is the leading figure in H. P. Lovecraft scholarship and criticism. In the following excerpt, he traces prominent themes, concepts, and imagery in Dunsany's works.
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Critical Essay by Cornelius Weygandt
10,113 words, approx. 34 pages
In the following excerpt, Weygandt surveys Dunsany's dramas.
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Critical Essay by AE [pseudonym of George Russell]
2,538 words, approx. 9 pages
Through his work and his charismatic personality, AE was highly influential among the writers of the Irish Renaissance, a generation which sought to reduce the influence of English culture and create a national literature in Ireland. He was central to the rise of the Irish National Theater, and, with W B. Yeats, J. M. Synge, and Lady Gregory, was one of the founders of the Abbey Theater. In the following essay, which originally appeared in Irish Statesman, AE praises Dunsany's imagination and prose ...
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Critical Essay by Elizabeth Bowen
979 words, approx. 3 pages
Bowen was an Anglo-Irish fiction writer and critic. In the following essay, she reviews My Ireland.
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Critical Essay by Katharine Tynan
829 words, approx. 3 pages
An early member of the Celtic Revival, Tynan was a highly regarded Irish poet, novelist, journalist, and critic. In the following essay, she favorably reviews Fifty-One Tales.
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Critical Essay by Ludwig Lewisohn
695 words, approx. 2 pages
A German-born American novelist and critic, Lewisohn served as the drama critic for The Nation during the early 920s and later edited the Zionist magazine New Palestine. In the following essay, he praises the dramas collected in Plays of Gods and Men and Plays of Near and Far.


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