fbpx
Wikipedia

Irish prose fiction

The first Irish prose fiction, in the form of legendary stories, appeared in the Irish language as early as the seventh century, along with chronicles and lives of saints in Irish and Latin. Such fiction was an adaptation and elaboration of earlier oral material and was the work of a learned class who had acquired literacy with the coming of Latin Christianity. A number of these stories were still available in manuscripts of the late medieval period and even as late as the nineteenth century, though poetry was by that time the main literary vehicle of the Irish language.

Jonathan Swift, the first Irish novelist of note.

The first notable English-language prose fiction in Ireland was the work of Jonathan Swift, who published Gulliver's Travels in 1726. Little of note appeared in English by any resident Irish writer until the nineteenth century, when a number of novelists came to prominence.

Modern prose fiction in Irish owes much to the Gaelic revival at the end of the nineteenth century, when cultural nationalists made a determined effort to create the conditions for a modern literature. A substantial body of short stories and novels appeared in Irish as a result.

Irish prose fiction in English attracted worldwide attention in the course of the twentieth century. Its greatest exponent was James Joyce, a highly influential modernist whose only rival in Irish was Máirtín Ó Cadhain.

Prose fiction in both languages has continued to flourish, with English being the primary vehicle. The short story has received particular attention, with a number of distinguished practitioners.

Early and medieval period edit

The earliest Irish prose fiction is a branch of heroic literature: stories dealing with supernatural personages and human heroes. One of the most famous is Táin Bó Cuailnge, together with its associated stories. It is thought to have been originally a seventh century text and deals with the conflict between Connacht and Ulster in the pre-Christian period. Another well-known tale is Scéla Mucc Meic Dathó, written c. 800 and dealing with the rivalries of a warrior aristocracy. Fled Bricrend is an inventive satire, recounting the conflict that follows the machinations of the malicious Bricriu. A number of famous tales are associated with narrative groupings known as the Ulster Cycle and the Cycle of the Kings. It has been noted that it is not heroic deeds per se that supply the interest of the stories, but the dramatic consequences that flow from those exploits. The stories are notable for the importance of the female protagonists.[1]

The coming of the Anglo-Normans in the twelfth century brought with it new literary influences. By the fourteenth century translations were being made into Irish from other languages. Among these were Merugad Uilis mac Leirtis, a prose adaptation from the Odyssey via Latin, and Stair Ercuil agus a bhás, a fifteenth century composition translated from the English version of a French work. Arthurian tales or works showing Arthurian influence were popular in Irish, and two English tales, Bevis of Hampton and Sir Guy of Warwick, were also translated.[2]

1600 to 1800 edit

The outstanding fictional prose work of seventeenth century Ireland is Pairlement Chloinne Tomáis, a Rabelaisian satire written by members of the Gaelic elite on what they saw as the upstart lower classes, who were taking advantage of the disruption to the social order caused by the weakening of the old Irish nobility. This work was popular and influential, with its hero, Tomás Mac Lóbais, becoming a proverbial figure. Its themes were reflected in a number of other satires or burlesque tales of the period.[3]

The late seventeenth century saw the birth in Dublin of Jonathan Swift (1667 – 1745), a satirist and clergyman who in 1726 published the first great work by an Anglo-Irish writer, Gulliver's Travels. Though this had no specifically Irish relevance, it set a standard for later writers in English.

The eighteenth century saw the birth in Ireland of two distinguished novelists, Laurence Sterne (1713 – 1768) and Oliver Goldsmith (1728 – 1774), both of whom, however, made their careers in England. Despite this, their oeuvre is often included in the Anglo-Irish literary canon. Sterne published The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman (1759–1767), a satire on the biographical novel. Goldsmith, best known as a poet, published The Vicar of Wakefield (1766), written in a direct and conversational style uncommon at the time.

 
Laurence Sterne as painted by Joshua Reynolds

Irish was still Ireland's most important literary language in the eighteenth century, but little prose was produced. The emphasis, instead, was on poetry, with such prominent literary figures as the Munster writer Aogán Ó Rathaille.

19th century edit

The 19th century saw a burgeoning of Anglo-Irish prose fiction, but literary output in Irish diminished dramatically.

Maria Edgeworth (1767–1849), though of English birth, spent most of her life in Ireland and wrote what is generally considered the first novel on an Irish theme, Castle Rackrent (1800), describing landlord-tenant relations on an Irish estate. A number of other novels followed. Lady Morgan (Sidney Owenson) (1776(?)-1859) was also a prolific writer. Her most successful work was her third novel, The Wild Irish Girl (1806), a work marked by Jacobin feminist politics.

Charles Robert Maturin (1782–1824) was best known for Melmoth the Wanderer (1820), a Faustian tale of a man who sells his soul to the devil.

William Carleton (1794–1869) and John Banim (1798–1842) wrote novels that depicted with some realism the lives of Irish peasantry. The latter often wrote in collaboration with his brother Michael Banim (1796–1874). All these writers came from the world they depicted. Gerald Griffin (1803–1840) was born in Limerick but spent time in England. On returning to Ireland he wrote The Collegians, on which his reputation rests.

Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu (1814–1873) was born in Dublin and lived there for most of his life. He was noted for his mystery novels and Gothic fiction (some of which is based on Irish folklore). Bram Stoker (1847–1912), a writer of similar interests, was born in Dublin but spent much his life in England. He wrote many books but is best known for Dracula, one of the most famous novels in the Gothic tradition.

Charles Kickham (1828–1882) was born in County Tipperary. He served a term in prison for treasonous activities and began writing novels there. His Knocknagow; or The Homes of Tipperary (1879) was the most popular Irish novel of the 19th century.

Edith Anna Somerville (1858–1949) and her cousin, Violet Florence Martin (1862–1915) wrote in collaboration and popularised the "big house" novel, based on the life of the Irish gentry class to which they themselves belonged. Their books include The Irish R.M. and The Real Charlotte.

George Moore (1852–1933) spent much of his early career in Paris and was one of the first writers to use the techniques of the French realist novelists in English. His novels were often controversial for their frankness. His short stories helped popularise the form among Irish authors.

The persistence of traditional genres in Irish can be seen in the papers of Amhlaoibh Ó Súilleabháin, a Kilkenny schoolteacher, merchant and diarist of the early nineteenth century. Like many other local Irish scholars at the time, he assembled a comprehensive manuscript collection of earlier Irish prose, and also wrote prose sketches himself, though these remained unpublished.[4]

1900 on edit

Fiction in English edit

James Joyce (1882–1941) is often regarded as the father of the literary technique known as "stream of consciousness", best exemplified in his famous work Ulysses. Joyce also wrote Finnegans Wake, Dubliners, and the semi-autobiographical A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Ulysses, often considered to be the greatest novel of the 20th century, is the story of a day in the life of a city, Dublin. Finnegans Wake is written in an invented language which parodies English, Irish and Latin.

Samuel Beckett (1906–1989), who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969, was born in Dublin but later moved to France. He wrote thereafter in French and English. Best known for his plays, he also wrote works of fiction, including his trilogy Molloy, Malone Dies and The Unnamable (originally written in French).

Aidan Higgins (1927 – 2015) wrote an experimental version of the big house novel called Langrishe, Go Down. He also published short stories and several volumes of memoirs, often in an experimental vein. More conventional exponents of the big house novel include Elizabeth Bowen (1899–1973), whose novels and short stories include Encounters (1923), The Last September (1929), and The Death of the Heart (1938) and Molly Keane (1904–1996) (writing as M.J. Farrell), author of Young Entry (1928), Conversation Piece (1932), Devoted Ladies (1934), Full House (1935), The Loving Without Tears (1951) and other works.

Francis Stuart (1902–2000) published his first novel, Women and God in 1931. He was a prolific novelist. He went to work in Germany in the 1930s and his reputation was affected by his decision to remain there during World War II, broadcasting anti-British talks on German radio. His novel Black List, Section H (1971), is a fictionalised account of those years.

With the rise of the Irish Free State and the Republic of Ireland, some authors began to write of the lives of the lower-middle classes and small farmers. Exponents of this genre include Brinsley MacNamara (1890–1963) (real name John Weldon), whose 1918 The Valley of the Squinting Windows was the first novel in this genre, and John McGahern (1934 - 2006), whose first novel, The Dark (1965), depicted child abuse in a rural community. The Catholic conscience in the modern world was examined by Brian Moore (1921–1999), who was born in Belfast but became a citizen of Canada in 1953.

J. G. Farrell (1935–79) was born in Liverpool of Anglo-Irish parents, but lived intermittently in Ireland after World War II. His works include a novel called Troubles, set during the Irish War of Independence (1919 – 1921), and this has led some to regard him as an Irish novelist. He acquired a high critical reputation.[5][6]

Brian O'Nolan (known by the pen name Flann O'Brien) is best known for two works in English, the surrealistic and satirical At Swim-Two-Birds (1939), highly praised by Joyce, and The Third Policeman, published in 1967, after his death. But he was also the author of An Béal Bocht (1941), a satire in Irish on Gaeltacht autobiographies, later translated as The Poor Mouth.

The short story has also proven popular with Irish fiction writers. Well-known writers in the genre include Frank O'Connor (1903–1966) and Seán Ó Faoláin (1900–1991).

Notable names straddling the late 20th and early 21st-century include John Banville, Sebastian Barry, Gerard Beirne, Dermot Bolger, Seamus Deane, Dermot Healy, Jennifer Johnston, Eugene McCabe, Patrick McCabe, John McGahern, Edna O'Brien, Colm Tóibín, William Trevor and William Wall. Writers to have emerged in the 21st-century include Claire Keegan, Philip Ó Ceallaigh, Cónal Creedon, Jamie O'Neill and Keith Ridgway.

Recent fiction by Irish writers has attracted attention in the neighbouring United Kingdom. Some writers have won the Booker Prize, with others being shortlisted. Among Ireland's Booker winners are Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha by Roddy Doyle and The Gathering by Anne Enright. John Banville's The Sea won in 2005, though it proved a controversial choice.[7] Banville has also won other international awards, including the Franz Kafka Prize and the Austrian State Prize for European Literature, and has been mentioned as the next Irish contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature.[8][9][10][11]

There has been a rise in the amount of popular fiction being published in a range of genres, including romantic novels and detective stories set in New York. The 21st-century has also brought an increased emphasis on writing by women, which found concrete expression in the founding of the publishers Arlen House. Irish writers of a commercial bent include Cecelia Ahern (PS, I Love You), Maeve Binchy (Tara Road), John Boyne (The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas), Marian Keyes (Lucy Sullivan Is Getting Married) and Joseph O'Connor (Cowboys and Indians, Desperadoes).

Fiction in Irish edit

Fiction in Irish was greatly stimulated by the Gaelic revival, which insisted on the need for a modern literature. The first novel in Irish (an historical romance) was written by Patrick S. Dinneen, lexicographer and literary scholar. He was followed by Father Peadar Ua Laoghaire, who in the 1890s published, in a serialised form, a folkloristic novel strongly influenced by the storytelling tradition of the Gaeltacht, called Séadna. His other works include retellings of classical Irish stories.

Among the many writers who published prose fiction in Irish in the first decades of the twentieth century, two stood out: Patrick Pearse and Pádraig Ó Conaire. Pearse wrote elegant, idealised stories about the Irish-speaking countryside. Ó Conaire was a realist, dealing with urban as well as rural life, but also wrote an absurdist novel called Deoraíocht, unlike anything else published at the time. They were followed by two brothers, Séamus Ó Grianna and Seosamh Mac Grianna, who wrote in quite different ways about the Gaeltacht community in which they had grown up. Seosamh in particular was concerned with the psychological and emotional struggle involved in the transition to modernity.

The most prominent literary modernist was Máirtín Ó Cadhain, a native speaker who looked at his own community with a critical eye. His masterpiece was the novel Cré na Cille, filled with the voices of the quarrelling dead. He published several collections of short stories, adapting his writing style over time to an urban milieu. The best known modernists to follow him were not of Gaeltacht background: Eoghan Ó Tuairisc, Diarmaid Ó Súilleabháin, and Breandán Ó Doibhlin (the last influenced by French literary theory). Ó Tuairisc was a stylistic innovator; Ó Súilleabháin was immersed in the middle-class urban world; Ó Doibhlin was more introspective in his approach.

The Gaeltacht, though in linguistic decline, has continued to produce novelists and short story writers such as Pádraig Breathnach, Micheál Ó Conghaile, Pádraig Ó Cíobháin and Joe Steve Ó Neachtain.

There have also been contributions to more popular genres. They include the work of Cathal Ó Sándair (1922–1996), a prolific author whose oeuvre included westerns. Éilís Ní Dhuibhne has written popular murder mysteries.

The short story remains a popular genre in Irish as in English. Donncha Ó Céileachair and Síle Ní Chéileachair, brother and sister, published the influential collection Bullaí Mhártain in 1955. In 1953 Liam O'Flaherty published the collection Dúil, his only work in Irish. One of the best known of contemporary practitioners is Seán Mac Mathúna (who also writes in English). His work is characterised by humour and a poetic realism and has been praised for its originality. The work of Daithí Ó Muirí is distinguished by its black humour and absurdist quality, a contrast to the social realism of much modern writing in Irish. A recent development has been an increase in the number of women writers, including Orna Ní Choileáin, Méadhbh Ní Ghallchobhair, Deirdre Ní Ghrianna and others.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Williams agus Ní Mhuiríosa, pp. 3-18.
  2. ^ Williams agus Ní Mhuiríosa, pp. 121-131.
  3. ^ Williams, N.J.A, (ed.) (1981). Pairlement Chloinne Tomáis. Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, pp. i – xlv (introduction).
  4. ^ de Bhaldraithe, Tomás (ed.) (1976 reprint). Cín Lae Amhlaoibh. An Clóchomhar Tta., pp. xl – xlii.
  5. ^ "Lost and found: why JG Farrell's Troubles deserved its belated Booker win hands-down". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. 21 May 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  6. ^ Greacen, Lavinia (ed.). "JG Farrell in His Own Words Selected Letters and Diaries". Cork University Press.
  7. ^ Brockes, Emma (12 October 2005). "14th time lucky". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 12 October 2005.
  8. ^ "John Banville awarded Franz Kafka Prize". CBS News. 26 May 2011. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  9. ^ "Irish novelist wins Kafka prize". The Chronicle Herald. 27 May 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2011.
  10. ^ Flood, Alison (26 May 2011). "John Banville wins Kafka prize: Irish novelist given honour thought by some to be a Nobel prize augury". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  11. ^ "There is no better man than Banville for Nobel Prize". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. 8 October 2011. Retrieved 8 October 2011.

References edit

Williams, J.E. Caerwen agus Ní Mhuiríosa, Máirín (1979). Traidisiún Liteartha na nGael. An Clóchomhar Tta..

External links edit

  • Ricorso

irish, prose, fiction, also, irish, literature, irish, short, story, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources,. See also Irish literature and Irish short story This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Irish prose fiction news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The first Irish prose fiction in the form of legendary stories appeared in the Irish language as early as the seventh century along with chronicles and lives of saints in Irish and Latin Such fiction was an adaptation and elaboration of earlier oral material and was the work of a learned class who had acquired literacy with the coming of Latin Christianity A number of these stories were still available in manuscripts of the late medieval period and even as late as the nineteenth century though poetry was by that time the main literary vehicle of the Irish language Jonathan Swift the first Irish novelist of note The first notable English language prose fiction in Ireland was the work of Jonathan Swift who published Gulliver s Travels in 1726 Little of note appeared in English by any resident Irish writer until the nineteenth century when a number of novelists came to prominence Modern prose fiction in Irish owes much to the Gaelic revival at the end of the nineteenth century when cultural nationalists made a determined effort to create the conditions for a modern literature A substantial body of short stories and novels appeared in Irish as a result Irish prose fiction in English attracted worldwide attention in the course of the twentieth century Its greatest exponent was James Joyce a highly influential modernist whose only rival in Irish was Mairtin o Cadhain Prose fiction in both languages has continued to flourish with English being the primary vehicle The short story has received particular attention with a number of distinguished practitioners Contents 1 Early and medieval period 2 1600 to 1800 3 19th century 4 1900 on 4 1 Fiction in English 4 2 Fiction in Irish 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEarly and medieval period editThe earliest Irish prose fiction is a branch of heroic literature stories dealing with supernatural personages and human heroes One of the most famous is Tain Bo Cuailnge together with its associated stories It is thought to have been originally a seventh century text and deals with the conflict between Connacht and Ulster in the pre Christian period Another well known tale is Scela Mucc Meic Datho written c 800 and dealing with the rivalries of a warrior aristocracy Fled Bricrend is an inventive satire recounting the conflict that follows the machinations of the malicious Bricriu A number of famous tales are associated with narrative groupings known as the Ulster Cycle and the Cycle of the Kings It has been noted that it is not heroic deeds per se that supply the interest of the stories but the dramatic consequences that flow from those exploits The stories are notable for the importance of the female protagonists 1 The coming of the Anglo Normans in the twelfth century brought with it new literary influences By the fourteenth century translations were being made into Irish from other languages Among these were Merugad Uilis mac Leirtis a prose adaptation from the Odyssey via Latin and Stair Ercuil agus a bhas a fifteenth century composition translated from the English version of a French work Arthurian tales or works showing Arthurian influence were popular in Irish and two English tales Bevis of Hampton and Sir Guy of Warwick were also translated 2 1600 to 1800 editThe outstanding fictional prose work of seventeenth century Ireland is Pairlement Chloinne Tomais a Rabelaisian satire written by members of the Gaelic elite on what they saw as the upstart lower classes who were taking advantage of the disruption to the social order caused by the weakening of the old Irish nobility This work was popular and influential with its hero Tomas Mac Lobais becoming a proverbial figure Its themes were reflected in a number of other satires or burlesque tales of the period 3 The late seventeenth century saw the birth in Dublin of Jonathan Swift 1667 1745 a satirist and clergyman who in 1726 published the first great work by an Anglo Irish writer Gulliver s Travels Though this had no specifically Irish relevance it set a standard for later writers in English The eighteenth century saw the birth in Ireland of two distinguished novelists Laurence Sterne 1713 1768 and Oliver Goldsmith 1728 1774 both of whom however made their careers in England Despite this their oeuvre is often included in the Anglo Irish literary canon Sterne published The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy Gentleman 1759 1767 a satire on the biographical novel Goldsmith best known as a poet published The Vicar of Wakefield 1766 written in a direct and conversational style uncommon at the time nbsp Laurence Sterne as painted by Joshua ReynoldsIrish was still Ireland s most important literary language in the eighteenth century but little prose was produced The emphasis instead was on poetry with such prominent literary figures as the Munster writer Aogan o Rathaille 19th century editThe 19th century saw a burgeoning of Anglo Irish prose fiction but literary output in Irish diminished dramatically Maria Edgeworth 1767 1849 though of English birth spent most of her life in Ireland and wrote what is generally considered the first novel on an Irish theme Castle Rackrent 1800 describing landlord tenant relations on an Irish estate A number of other novels followed Lady Morgan Sidney Owenson 1776 1859 was also a prolific writer Her most successful work was her third novel The Wild Irish Girl 1806 a work marked by Jacobin feminist politics Charles Robert Maturin 1782 1824 was best known for Melmoth the Wanderer 1820 a Faustian tale of a man who sells his soul to the devil William Carleton 1794 1869 and John Banim 1798 1842 wrote novels that depicted with some realism the lives of Irish peasantry The latter often wrote in collaboration with his brother Michael Banim 1796 1874 All these writers came from the world they depicted Gerald Griffin 1803 1840 was born in Limerick but spent time in England On returning to Ireland he wrote The Collegians on which his reputation rests Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu 1814 1873 was born in Dublin and lived there for most of his life He was noted for his mystery novels and Gothic fiction some of which is based on Irish folklore Bram Stoker 1847 1912 a writer of similar interests was born in Dublin but spent much his life in England He wrote many books but is best known for Dracula one of the most famous novels in the Gothic tradition Charles Kickham 1828 1882 was born in County Tipperary He served a term in prison for treasonous activities and began writing novels there His Knocknagow or The Homes of Tipperary 1879 was the most popular Irish novel of the 19th century Edith Anna Somerville 1858 1949 and her cousin Violet Florence Martin 1862 1915 wrote in collaboration and popularised the big house novel based on the life of the Irish gentry class to which they themselves belonged Their books include The Irish R M and The Real Charlotte George Moore 1852 1933 spent much of his early career in Paris and was one of the first writers to use the techniques of the French realist novelists in English His novels were often controversial for their frankness His short stories helped popularise the form among Irish authors The persistence of traditional genres in Irish can be seen in the papers of Amhlaoibh o Suilleabhain a Kilkenny schoolteacher merchant and diarist of the early nineteenth century Like many other local Irish scholars at the time he assembled a comprehensive manuscript collection of earlier Irish prose and also wrote prose sketches himself though these remained unpublished 4 1900 on editFiction in English edit James Joyce 1882 1941 is often regarded as the father of the literary technique known as stream of consciousness best exemplified in his famous work Ulysses Joyce also wrote Finnegans Wake Dubliners and the semi autobiographical A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man Ulysses often considered to be the greatest novel of the 20th century is the story of a day in the life of a city Dublin Finnegans Wake is written in an invented language which parodies English Irish and Latin Samuel Beckett 1906 1989 who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969 was born in Dublin but later moved to France He wrote thereafter in French and English Best known for his plays he also wrote works of fiction including his trilogy Molloy Malone Dies and The Unnamable originally written in French Aidan Higgins 1927 2015 wrote an experimental version of the big house novel called Langrishe Go Down He also published short stories and several volumes of memoirs often in an experimental vein More conventional exponents of the big house novel include Elizabeth Bowen 1899 1973 whose novels and short stories include Encounters 1923 The Last September 1929 and The Death of the Heart 1938 and Molly Keane 1904 1996 writing as M J Farrell author of Young Entry 1928 Conversation Piece 1932 Devoted Ladies 1934 Full House 1935 The Loving Without Tears 1951 and other works Francis Stuart 1902 2000 published his first novel Women and God in 1931 He was a prolific novelist He went to work in Germany in the 1930s and his reputation was affected by his decision to remain there during World War II broadcasting anti British talks on German radio His novel Black List Section H 1971 is a fictionalised account of those years With the rise of the Irish Free State and the Republic of Ireland some authors began to write of the lives of the lower middle classes and small farmers Exponents of this genre include Brinsley MacNamara 1890 1963 real name John Weldon whose 1918 The Valley of the Squinting Windows was the first novel in this genre and John McGahern 1934 2006 whose first novel The Dark 1965 depicted child abuse in a rural community The Catholic conscience in the modern world was examined by Brian Moore 1921 1999 who was born in Belfast but became a citizen of Canada in 1953 J G Farrell 1935 79 was born in Liverpool of Anglo Irish parents but lived intermittently in Ireland after World War II His works include a novel called Troubles set during the Irish War of Independence 1919 1921 and this has led some to regard him as an Irish novelist He acquired a high critical reputation 5 6 Brian O Nolan known by the pen name Flann O Brien is best known for two works in English the surrealistic and satirical At Swim Two Birds 1939 highly praised by Joyce and The Third Policeman published in 1967 after his death But he was also the author of An Beal Bocht 1941 a satire in Irish on Gaeltacht autobiographies later translated as The Poor Mouth The short story has also proven popular with Irish fiction writers Well known writers in the genre include Frank O Connor 1903 1966 and Sean o Faolain 1900 1991 Notable names straddling the late 20th and early 21st century include John Banville Sebastian Barry Gerard Beirne Dermot Bolger Seamus Deane Dermot Healy Jennifer Johnston Eugene McCabe Patrick McCabe John McGahern Edna O Brien Colm Toibin William Trevor and William Wall Writers to have emerged in the 21st century include Claire Keegan Philip o Ceallaigh Conal Creedon Jamie O Neill and Keith Ridgway Recent fiction by Irish writers has attracted attention in the neighbouring United Kingdom Some writers have won the Booker Prize with others being shortlisted Among Ireland s Booker winners are Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha by Roddy Doyle and The Gathering by Anne Enright John Banville s The Sea won in 2005 though it proved a controversial choice 7 Banville has also won other international awards including the Franz Kafka Prize and the Austrian State Prize for European Literature and has been mentioned as the next Irish contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature 8 9 10 11 There has been a rise in the amount of popular fiction being published in a range of genres including romantic novels and detective stories set in New York The 21st century has also brought an increased emphasis on writing by women which found concrete expression in the founding of the publishers Arlen House Irish writers of a commercial bent include Cecelia Ahern PS I Love You Maeve Binchy Tara Road John Boyne The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas Marian Keyes Lucy Sullivan Is Getting Married and Joseph O Connor Cowboys and Indians Desperadoes Fiction in Irish edit Fiction in Irish was greatly stimulated by the Gaelic revival which insisted on the need for a modern literature The first novel in Irish an historical romance was written by Patrick S Dinneen lexicographer and literary scholar He was followed by Father Peadar Ua Laoghaire who in the 1890s published in a serialised form a folkloristic novel strongly influenced by the storytelling tradition of the Gaeltacht called Seadna His other works include retellings of classical Irish stories Among the many writers who published prose fiction in Irish in the first decades of the twentieth century two stood out Patrick Pearse and Padraig o Conaire Pearse wrote elegant idealised stories about the Irish speaking countryside o Conaire was a realist dealing with urban as well as rural life but also wrote an absurdist novel called Deoraiocht unlike anything else published at the time They were followed by two brothers Seamus o Grianna and Seosamh Mac Grianna who wrote in quite different ways about the Gaeltacht community in which they had grown up Seosamh in particular was concerned with the psychological and emotional struggle involved in the transition to modernity The most prominent literary modernist was Mairtin o Cadhain a native speaker who looked at his own community with a critical eye His masterpiece was the novel Cre na Cille filled with the voices of the quarrelling dead He published several collections of short stories adapting his writing style over time to an urban milieu The best known modernists to follow him were not of Gaeltacht background Eoghan o Tuairisc Diarmaid o Suilleabhain and Breandan o Doibhlin the last influenced by French literary theory o Tuairisc was a stylistic innovator o Suilleabhain was immersed in the middle class urban world o Doibhlin was more introspective in his approach The Gaeltacht though in linguistic decline has continued to produce novelists and short story writers such as Padraig Breathnach Micheal o Conghaile Padraig o Ciobhain and Joe Steve o Neachtain There have also been contributions to more popular genres They include the work of Cathal o Sandair 1922 1996 a prolific author whose oeuvre included westerns Eilis Ni Dhuibhne has written popular murder mysteries The short story remains a popular genre in Irish as in English Donncha o Ceileachair and Sile Ni Cheileachair brother and sister published the influential collection Bullai Mhartain in 1955 In 1953 Liam O Flaherty published the collection Duil his only work in Irish One of the best known of contemporary practitioners is Sean Mac Mathuna who also writes in English His work is characterised by humour and a poetic realism and has been praised for its originality The work of Daithi o Muiri is distinguished by its black humour and absurdist quality a contrast to the social realism of much modern writing in Irish A recent development has been an increase in the number of women writers including Orna Ni Choileain Meadhbh Ni Ghallchobhair Deirdre Ni Ghrianna and others See also editIrish literature Irish poetry Irish short story Irish theatre List of Irish novelists List of Irish poets List of Irish short story writers List of people on stamps of IrelandNotes edit Williams agus Ni Mhuiriosa pp 3 18 Williams agus Ni Mhuiriosa pp 121 131 Williams N J A ed 1981 Pairlement Chloinne Tomais Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies pp i xlv introduction de Bhaldraithe Tomas ed 1976 reprint Cin Lae Amhlaoibh An Clochomhar Tta pp xl xlii Lost and found why JG Farrell s Troubles deserved its belated Booker win hands down The Guardian Guardian Media Group 21 May 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2010 Greacen Lavinia ed JG Farrell in His Own Words Selected Letters and Diaries Cork University Press Brockes Emma 12 October 2005 14th time lucky The Guardian Guardian Media Group Retrieved 12 October 2005 John Banville awarded Franz Kafka Prize CBS News 26 May 2011 Retrieved 26 May 2011 Irish novelist wins Kafka prize The Chronicle Herald 27 May 2011 Retrieved 27 May 2011 Flood Alison 26 May 2011 John Banville wins Kafka prize Irish novelist given honour thought by some to be a Nobel prize augury The Guardian Guardian Media Group Retrieved 26 May 2011 There is no better man than Banville for Nobel Prize Irish Independent Independent News amp Media 8 October 2011 Retrieved 8 October 2011 References editWilliams J E Caerwen agus Ni Mhuiriosa Mairin 1979 Traidisiun Liteartha na nGael An Clochomhar Tta External links editRicorso Irish Writers Online Contemporary Irish texts available for free download under Creative Commons Licence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Irish prose fiction amp oldid 1214140327, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.