DublinesKatie Donovan, Brendan Kennelly Bloodaxe Books, 1996 - 320 sayfa Dublin has been called the centre of the paralysis of the Universe, the second city of Empire, Scandaltown, Strumpet City, a series of accidental encounters, the largest village in Europe, the fishy home of Molly Malone, and - occasionally - the capital of Ireland. Although Dublin has had a history that encompasses a huge range of human experience, Dublines is not a conventional historical presentation of the city's fascinating character, it is more a series of pictures and a choir of voices that together form a complex portrait of the city - from its venomous wit to its instinctive warm-heartedness, from its sick congestion to the expansive visions and statements of many of its sons and daughters. Questions implied in Dublines include: To what extent is Dublin still a little London? Is it in some ways a post-colonial parody of a genuine Irish city? Is it severed from the rest of Ireland, smugly unaware in its conscious and unconscious egotism, condescending even when its mediocrity is obvious? Or has it a character all its own?This anthology has been compiled not in a spirit of judgement but in a spirit of fair-mindedness. In other words, readers of this book will, when they've read it, have their own view of Dublin through the ages and the rages, the poverty, power, opulence, elegance, ugliness, congestion, gossip, disease, beggary, nightmares, revolutions and renewals of the city. Stodgy chronology is bypassed and a system of contrasts and comparisons, startling affinities and shocking oppositions is used to let the pictures and voices of Dublin have their say. The structure of the book reflects the relentless, scintillating talk, chat and gossip of the city. Here are Dublin's voices of the centuries: novelists, poets, talkers, dramatists, historians, wanderers, anecdotalists, tourists, short story writers and chroniclers of all kinds. Dublin is a city that produces and cherishes its famous characters; but the most enduring character of all is Dublin herself.Every Dub is Dublin's leading authority on Dublin. To avoid arguments, neither of the editors of Dublines is from Dublin (but both have lived in the city for most of their lives). Brendan Kennelly, a Kerryman, is one of Ireland's best-known poets and Professor of Modern Literature at Trinity College Dublin. Katie Donovan, poet, critic and Dublin journalist, is from Wexford. First word on this book from a Dub friend of theirs: 'Sure, what would a pair o' culchies know about Dublin? Yez are only a pair of blow-ins.' Read on for their answer... |
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accent alive ANTHONY CRONIN asked BEHAN Bernard Billy BOB GELDOF Brendan BRENDAN BEHAN called Catholic Church Courts crowd door drink Dublin eyes face father feel Fianna Fáil FitzPatrick FLANN O'BRIEN friends Furriskey girls Grafton Street hand Haughey heart Heffernan HUGH LEONARD Ireland Irish JAMES JOYCE Jimmy JOHN BANVILLE JOHN MCGAHERN JOHN O'DONOVAN kids Kinsella knew ladies laughed Liberties Liffey lived look Mammy MARY MARY LAVIN mind Miss Kevin morning mother never night NUALA O'FAOLÁIN Parnell PATRICK PATRICK KAVANAGH PINT OF PLAIN play political pome poor prison Professor Flacks remember RODDY DOYLE SEAN O'CASEY Slattery Stephen's Green story Swift talk taverns tell theatre things thought told took turned V.S. PRITCHETT W.B. YEATS walked Wilde WILLIAM TREVOR window woman women words young