Billy Colfer's Wexford Castles expands his look at the Irish landscape
by taking a thematic approach, while still staying loyal to the central
landscape focus. Rather than adapting a narrowly architectural approach,
he situates these buildings in a superbly reconstructed historical,
social, and cultural milieu. County Wexford has three strikingly
different regions -- the Anglo-Norman south, the hybridized middle and
the Gaelic north -- which render it a remarkable version in parvo of
the wider island. Colfer's wide-angle lens takes in so much more than
the castles themselves, as he ranges widely and deeply in reading these
striking buildings as texts, revealing the cultural assumptions and
historical circumstances which shaped them.
The book breaks new ground in exploring the long-run cultural shadow
cast by the Anglo-Normans and their castles, as this appears in the
Gothic Revival, in the poetry of Yeats and in the surprisingly profuse
crop of Wexford historians and writers. While most books on a single
architectural form can end up visually monotonous, creativity has been
lavished on this volume in terms of keeping the images varied, fresh and
constantly appealing. The result is a sympathetic and innovative
treatment of the castles, understood not just as a mere architectural
form, but as keys to unlocking the mentalite of those who lived in them.