This article considers John Banville's engagement with memories of the Irish Famine and the conventions of the Irish Gothic and Big House novel in his 2009 novel The Infinities by comparing his approach to these topics to that of Emily Lawless in her considerably earlier 1897 collection Traits and Confidences. I argue that Banville's engagement with the history of the Irish Famine and the conventions of the Irish Gothic and Big House novel are not incidental to the novel's exploration of the problem of identity and the idea of the self but, rather, are fundamental to its thematic investments. Furthermore, I suggest that the novel's experimental form fits into Irish literary tradition as Banville's novel develops questions of identity, form, and content central to Lawless's text.
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