Editors’ Introduction: Flann O’Brien and the nonhuman
Katherine Ebury, Paul Fagan and John Greaney
1. At Swim O’Brien: Water, structure and aesthetics
2. Writing with Air in The Third Policeman
3. Paper Environments: Crisis and control in At Swim-Two-Birds
Elliott
Mills
4. ‘the reassuring unmistakability of the abiding earth’: Nature writing, state engineering, the Anthropocene in The Third Policeman
5. The Abhumanity and Animality of An Drochshaol: Faminised environments of becoming in An Béal Bocht
6. Consenting Cows: Animal justice in At Swim-Two-Birds
Einat Adar
7. Parasites: Signal and noise in Rhapsody in Stephen’s Green
Tobias W.
Harris
8. Drawing Corca Dhorca: Animal vulnerability in An Béal Bocht and its graphic adaptation
Yaeli
Greenblatt
9. Trials of Legitimacy: Emergency powers, habeas corpus and nonhuman witnesses in At Swim-Two-Birds
10. ‘more to it than the monstrous exchange of tissue for metal’: Reading the O’Nolan bicycle
James
Fraser
11. Putting Iron on You: Mobility and internalised ableism in The Third Policeman
Holly
Connell Schaaf
12. For Steam Men: Myles na gCopaleen and Irish rail
James Bacon
13. Flann O’Brien’s Radio Jamming
Yuta
Imazeki
14. ‘A vast sequence of imponderable beings’: Becoming-imperceptible in The Third Policeman and Cees Nooteboom’s The Following Story