Monday, February 15, 2016
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
John McGahern - The Writer and the Archive - RTÉ Radio 1 Book Show Special
![]() |
John McGahern |
The 30th
of March brings about the tenth anniversary of the passing of the acclaimed
Irish writer, John McGahern. In the decade since his death, Ireland and its
people, society and identity, have changed beyond recognition. One of McGahern's
great achievements in his writing, in any of his accomplished forms; novel,
drama, short story or essay, was an ability to get to the very heart of Ireland and
especially of rural Ireland and the lives of its people. The time, place and
context of McGahern's writing would be recognisable constants, vivid as any
character within his writing. McGahern's writing spanned over five decades and
tracked the huge social changes in Ireland across this time.
The Book Show on RTÉ Radio 1 recently broadcast a feature on John McGahern, focusing on the life and career and also his archive. It was a pleasure to have the programme host, Sinead Gleeson, visit the archive here at NUI Galway and see first-hand the collected literary legacy of one of Ireland's most accomplished and beloved authors.
The Book Show on RTÉ Radio 1 recently broadcast a feature on John McGahern, focusing on the life and career and also his archive. It was a pleasure to have the programme host, Sinead Gleeson, visit the archive here at NUI Galway and see first-hand the collected literary legacy of one of Ireland's most accomplished and beloved authors.
The award-winning
writer had a body of loyal readers around the globe from publications from the
early 1960s in The New Yorker
magazine, through his early novels, The
Barracks (1963) The Dark
(notoriously banned on grounds of indecency in 1965) and Amongst Women, (1990) to name a few. McGahern's short-story
collections, such as Nightlines
(1979) and High Ground (1985) drew
readers to his power of expression within the contained form of the story.
John's later writing would see a life's work come full-circle and culminate in
such loved works as the novel That They
May Face the Rising Sun (2002) and the revealing and striking Memoir (2005)
The archive
of John McGahern is held with the James Hardiman Library, NUI Galway. Deposited
by McGahern in 2003, just three years ahead of his death, the archive is a
literary treasure-trove that records not just the vast and prolific writings of
McGahern, but also his literary relationships with other writers and offers a
unique insight into the mind and processes of McGahern as both a writer and
person.
Such unique
material in the archive includes the manuscript for The End or the Beginning of Love, the unpublished novel by
McGahern, that was accepted for publication by Faber and Faber in 1962, but
which was withdrawn by McGahern as he believed it to be not good enough.
![]() |
McGahern's unpublished novel |
Other
material from this period includes a letter from William Maxwell, fiction
editor of The New Yorker magazine addressed
to Elizabeth (Cullinane) that is confirmation of the young McGahern's
publication in the prestigious magazine. In the letter Maxwell writes that 'The
John McGahern story [Strandhill, The Sea] went through' and that 'whoever
handles him will be writing him to tell that it is accepted'; he goes on to
state that 'if you see any more [manuscripts] of this calibre floating around
Dublin, start them on their way to me.' (1963) (P71/1171)
Also from this
time are two letters from John McGahern to Mary O'Malley in relation to the Threshold literary journal published by
the Lyric Theatre, and found within the archive of the Lyric Theatre, also
within the Hardiman Library. He asks to be considered for publication although
'I have not appeared in print' (17 January 1959) and later discusses publishing
an extract from one of his novels (26 June 1962).
![]() |
Drafts of Bank Holiday |
The archive reveals the private and intimate world of the writer at work. The writing style of McGahern is revealing of how he worked. He wrote long-hand, often in coffee-stained school copy books and A4 notebooks. The scrawl of handwriting gives a sense of working on fleeting ideas that would often change and fluctuate. The number of drafts and revisions show McGahern rarely let go of an idea or a narrative completely but would often return to make changes, often to as much or as little as a single word or line, but which would bring the setting or characters or plot in a new direction. One short-story, Bank Holiday, has over twenty identifiable drafts alone.
The John
McGahern archive consists of forty boxes of manuscripts. All evidence of 'the
writer at work' is within this volume of manuscripts and covers the breadth of
McGahern's writing in prose, drama, fiction and essay. The papers give the reader a unique and
otherwise impossible accessibility to the mind of McGahern. McGahern himself
said of the separate worlds of the writer and the reader: "I
think each of us inhabit a private world that others cannot see" – the
archive brings those two private worlds together and is perhaps the only place
this can happen.
![]() |
Drafts of The Power of Darkness - a play by John McGahern |
You can listen back to the RTÉ Radio 1 Book Show, hosted by Sinead Gleeson here:
Tuesday, February 2, 2016
Official Launch of our New Archive Search System
The Registrar and Deputy President of NUI Galway, Professor Pól Ó'Dochartaigh, and the Director of the Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Professor Daniel Carey will tomorrow officially launch what we in Archives and Special Collections have fondly come to know as CalmView. Here is what you, dear readers, NEED to know about this rather exciting development!
What in the name of all that is good and holy is a Calm View?! Well... it's a product name! It combines an acronym for Cataloguing in Archives, Libraries and Museums, with the word 'view' to describe what you, the researcher, will see on your computer screen when you visit http://archivesearch.library.nuigalway.ie/. CalmView describes a web interface through which you can search through all of our finding aids. In other words it is your entry point to the 350 + Archive Collections held in the James Hardiman Library.
Why would this be useful to me? The enhanced search functionality afforded by this new service means you can carry out keyword searches across the entire catalogue. This means you can browse through over 20,000 records from more than 350 collections simultaneously, bringing insights from other sources to light that you may not have considered previously. Archival research is fuel for innovative research in any discipline, and CalmView could hold the key to unlocking your next research project.
When? The launch takes place on Wednesday 3rd February at 5:15. It will be held in the Archives and Special Collections Reading Room, on the Ground Floor of the James Hardiman Library. Our speakers include Professors Pól Ó'Dochartaigh and Daniel Carey, and our University Librarian John Cox will act as MC. There will also be a demonstration of CalmView in action. If you would like to attend, for catering purposes please email ann.cullinane@nuigalway.ie or aisling.keane@nuigalway.ie.
CalmView is already up and running, so please go ahead and check it out for yourself. You can find it at http://archivesearch.library.nuigalway.ie/ Happy Browsing!!
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Pearse, Hyde, Casement, Markievicz and na Fianna Éireann
![]() |
Cover of Na Fianna Handbook |
An item of interest to historians of numerous aspects of revolutionary Ireland will be this volume from within the collections of the Hardiman Library - the Fianna Handbook, issued by the Central Council of na Fianna Éireann, the forerunner to the Boy Scouts of Ireland and published in Dublin by E. Ponsonby, Limited, 116 Graftom Street.
The foundation of this boy-scout movement can be traced back to prior the foundation of the Irish Volunteers, to 1913. Bulmer Hobson, having managed a successful version of the group in Belfast was keen, along with Helena Moloney and Seán McGarry, Countess Markievicz and others to recreate a new Fianna Éireann movement in Dublin in 1909.
Though not clearly or directly indicated in the volume, the Handbook is thought to have been issued in 1913, which would again coincide with increased engagement and involvement with youth organisations and the formation of the Volunteers in that year and in the run-up to events such as the Easter Rising in 1916. Though it is interesting to spot that on the inside front title page, the image on the left includes an artist’s signature of ‘C de M, 1914’, perhaps indicating this could be a later printing or edition.
![]() |
Title pages of na Fianna Handbook |
The volume is striking for many reasons but when one considers the list of contributors, there are very few publications of any kind that feature contributions from so many major protagonists and social and cultural figures of this time. The volume features an introduction from Countess Markievicz, President of na Fianna and who describes:
“the army of young people who are daily taking the Declaration of Na Fianna Eireann and banding themselves together in a glorious brotherhood of youth and hope to win Independence and Freedom for their country.”
“I promise to work for the independence of Ireland, never to join England’s armed forced and to obey my superior officers.”
As well as chapters laden with diagrams for support of information on topics such as drilling, rifle exercises, camp life, knot-tying, signalling, first aid and swimming, there is also an essay on ‘Chivalry’ written by Roger Casement, who though writing for an audience of young boys was no less forthright and philosophical in his ideas on this topic:
“Chivalry dies when Imperialism begins. The one must kill the other. A chivalrous people must respect in others what they strive to maintain in themselves. Hence it comes when the age of empire begins the age of chivalry dies.”
Padraig Pearse, signing himself here as P.H. Pearse, B.A., Barrister-at-Law, invokes the folklore and history of the past Fianna, linking the recruits of ‘current historic companions’ to the first Fianna of over two thousand years ago. Pearse adds that “the story of those old Fianna of Fionn should be part of the daily thought of every Irish boy, and especially of every boy in the new Fianna.” Pearse relays in detail the story of the Fianna of Fionn and ends by reproducing Dr. [George] Sigerson’s translation of text from the book of Lismore which includes Acallam na Senórach, translated to English as The Colloquy of the Ancients, Tales of the Elders, etc. a Middle Irish narrative dating to the last quarter of the 12th century and an important text of the Fenian. It contains many Fenian narratives framed by a story in which featured the Fianna warriors Oisín and Caílte mac Rónáin. Following this poem, Pearse issues this rallying cry to the boys of na Fianna:
‘Centuries afterwards an Irish poet said mournfully: “All the Fianna have passed away/There remains to them no heir.” – But what say the boys of na Fianna Eireann?”.
This volume is an incredible record of its time, when the leaders of this period and being contributors to this handbook were clearly focusing a lot of attention on the youth of the country.
![]() |
Constitution of Na Fianna |
Monday, January 18, 2016
1916 from the Archives - New Publications and Events
It has been a busy time of late with so many archive
collections of the Hardiman Library pertaining to Ireland’s revolutionary
period. It will come as no surprise, being the year that it is, that material
relating to 1916 has been so prominent in new publications and TV programmes of
late.
![]() |
Arthur Shields |
An online exhibition
of images from the Arthur Shields Archive and a link to its catalogue can be
seen here. http://archives.library.nuigalway.ie:8080/digi/exbos/T13
A new book by Dr. Fearghal
McGarry, Abbey Rebels: A Revolution, Lost, was recently published and is a history of the varied and prominent roles
played by Abbey Theatre personnel in the Easter Rising. The book features a
chapter dedicated to Arthur Shields and exclusively reproduces high-resolution
copies of many items from the Shields Archive of the Hardiman Library. You can
read more about the book in its
latest review.
NUI Galway, in partnership with the Abbey Theatre has also made digitally available and fully transcribed, the minute books of the Board of the Abbey Theatre, 1904 - 1939, incorporating not just the Revolutionary period and the emergence of the Free State, but also spanning a major portion of the lifetime of poet and senator, W.B. Yeats, one of the co-founders of the Abbey Theatre.
NUI Galway, in partnership with the Abbey Theatre has also made digitally available and fully transcribed, the minute books of the Board of the Abbey Theatre, 1904 - 1939, incorporating not just the Revolutionary period and the emergence of the Free State, but also spanning a major portion of the lifetime of poet and senator, W.B. Yeats, one of the co-founders of the Abbey Theatre.
Throughout 1916 a
series of major events will take place on campus at NUI Galway. A recent
publication by NUIG 1916-Scholar-in Residence, Dr. Conor McNamara, is The Easter
Rebellion 1916: A New Illustrated History. The book was singled out
in the Irish Times as being one of
the major publications of this time that revisits the complex history of 1916.
The book offers a visual insight into the events and aftermath of the Rising
and you can see a selection of those images reproduced by The Irish Times.
On 22-23 January a
major conference, Proclaiming the
Revolution will take place at the Aula Maxima, NUI Galway. Featuring
leading scholars and researchers from NUI Galway, nationally around Ireland and
also international speakers, the conference will provide a rich and varied
platform for debating one of the key facets of the 1916 Rising, its Proclamation.
The conference is free but booking essential. Details and speakers are
available here: http://nuigarchives.blogspot.ie/2016/01/proclaiming-revolution-conference-nui.html
A major new exhibition
focusing on the events of 1916 will also open in February 2016 at the Hardiman
Research Building, NUI Galway. For a full programme of events for the NUI
Galway 1916 programme, see A Nation Rising.
Saturday, January 16, 2016
Remembering Alan Rickman - A star turn in Kilroy's "The Seagull" 1981
![]() |
Alan Rickman and Anna Massey in Thomas Kilroy's version of "The Seagull", P103/115 |
The news of the passing of actor
Alan Rickman was extremely sad news for the vast amounts of people who had
followed Rickman's varied career over forty years on stage and screen. Rickman,
69, was acclaimed for being one of the great character actors of his generation
with a canny ability to enthral his audiences, from young and old, from fans of Harry
Potter to Dogma or as an unequivocal De Valera in Michael Collins. Such was Rickman's
charisma and presence, with an always distinct voice, was an ability to transform
even a supporting character into a memorable and major role. You may not always
remember the film but you always remember Rickman's character
and all the great lines. (Sheriff of Nottingham: "That's it then. Cancel
the kitchen scraps for lepers and orphans, no more merciful beheadings . . . and
call off Christmas!" (Robin Hood –
Prince of Thieves)
Rickman like so many screen stars
began his career on stage and throughout a glittering Hollywood career
maintained a successful stage curriculum vitae. Rickman was reported to be a
pupil of renown at RADA and developed his craft on the fringe and regional circuit
of the UK in the late 1970s and 1980s. Michael Billington, theatre critic of The Guardian notes that:
All this came
to the fore in a golden period at the Royal Shakespeare Company in the
mid-1980s when he was a stubbly, neurotic Achilles in Troilus and Cressida and a mockingly cynical Jaques in As You Like It. But it was his
performance as the dissolute Valmont, successively in Stratford, London and New
York, that elevated him to star status. Playing opposite Lindsay Duncan’s
Marquise de Merteuil, Rickman conveyed both the lassitude of the practised
seducer and the growing self-disgust of a man aware of his destructiveness."
![]() |
Poster from the Royal Court production of "The Seagull" starring Alan Rickman. P103/115 |
It was during this time that
Rickman would perform in a play by Irish playwright Thomas Kilroy. Directed by
Max Stafford Clarke, the play was premiered at the Royal Court on 8 April 1981.
The play would have its Irish premiere, produced by the Irish Theatre Company
at Siamsa Tíre Theatre, Tralee on 30th September 1981.
The idea of the version of
Chekhov's classic to be translated and moved from the Russian provinces and set
in the West of Ireland case from the director of the Royal Court, Max
Stafford-Clarke. He wrote to Kilroy as follows:
"Dear Tom, I have been talking with Joe Dowling about the
possibility of the Royal Court and the Abbey mounting a joint production of THE
SEAGULL. The idea is that the play should be cast with English and with Irish
actors and instead of being set in Russia, should be set in the midst of an
Anglo-Irish family . . . Would you be interested in doing a translation and
would you have time for it?”
The adaptation that Kilroy would
write featured Alan Rickman as Mr. Aston and the cast would also feature
Harriet Walter, Alan Devlin and others. Within the Thomas Kilroy archive at the
Hardiman Library, NUI Galway, the production files for Kilroy's Seagull offer a wonderful account of the
development, writing and drafting of the play that stemmed from
Stafford-Clarke's single letter. Billington would write in his 1981 review of
the Royal Court London production: It is
a fine performance superbly backed by Alan Rickman's Aston."
Rickman's star ability to make any
character and indeed any production his own and ensure it is most memorable for
his audiences must be among the highest tributes for any actor. Both stage and
screen will be far poorer with the loss of Rickman.
The Thomas Kilroy Archive is available at the Hardiman Library, NUI Galway and a catalogue is available to read here: http://archives.library.nuigalway.ie/cgi-bin/FramedList.cgi?P103
![]() |
Cover of rehearsal script of "The Seagull" by Thomas Kilroy, for production at the Royal Court theatre, London. P103/115 |
Thursday, January 14, 2016
'Proclaiming the Revolution' Conference - NUI Galway 22-23 January
Proclaiming the
Revolution
Lower Aula Maxima
National University
of Ireland, Galway
22-23 January 2016
FRIDAY,
22 JANUARY
9.00 Registration
9.30 Introduction
9.45 Keynote
address: Dr Brian Hanley (independent
scholar)
‘The Ireland of our ideals': republicanism and separatism
in 1916
10.45
Tea/Coffee
11.00 Panel
1: Images of the Republic and Republicans
Dr Conor McNamara (NUI Galway)
Popular and rhetorical notions
of land and Freedom in the context of the 1916 Proclamation
W.J. McCormack
(former Professor of Literary History from Goldsmiths
College, London)
The Proclamation and its Democratic Credentials
Dara Folan (NUI Galway)
“Glúin na haislinge”:
imagining an Ireland 'not free merely, but Gaelic as well’
Dr Jackie Uí
Chionna (NUI Galway)
Shades of Green: Ideological interpretations of Irish
nationalism in Galway 1916
1.00 Lunch
2.00 Panel
2: ‘The whole nation and all of its parts’?
Liam
Kennedy (Emeritus
Professor of Economic History, Queen’s University, Belfast).
Texting Terror: The Ulster
Covenant and the Proclamation of the Irish Republic
Dr Mary Harris (NUI Galway)
The Proclamation and the Partition Question
Dr
Shane Nagle (Independent researcher)
Contextualising the
Proclamation: The Problem of Unity and Disunity in Nationalist Thought
3.30 Tea/Coffee
4.00 Keynote address:
Eamon Ó Cuív. T.D.
Does
1916 and the Proclamation have a relevance in Modern Ireland?
5.30 Book
Launch: W.J. McCormack, Enigmas of Sacrifice:
A Critique of Joseph M. Plunkett and the Dublin Insurrection of 1916 (Michigan State University Press)
SATURDAY
23 JANUARY
9.30 Keynote
address: Sinéad McCoole
How Revolutionary? Addressing Irishwomen
10.30 Tea/Coffee
10.45 Panel 3: Women in 1916 and Beyond
Maryann Gialanella Valiulis (Trinity College Dublin)
The Proclamation of 1916: The Making of Equality
Dr Micheline
Sheehy Skeffington
The role of Hanna
Sheehy Skeffington in shaping post 1916 Ireland
Dr Marie Coleman (Queen’s University, Belfast)
Female veterans of 1916 and the Irish state after
independence
12.45 Lunch
1.45 Panel
4: The Pursuit of Equality
Dr Mary Muldowney (Trinity College Dublin)
Working for "the principles of equal rights and opportunities
for the people of Ireland". The Irish Citizen Army and the 1916 Rising
James Curry (NUI Galway)
Rosie Hackett and the 1916 Rising
Dr David Convery, (NUI Galway)
'The Communist Party of Great Britain and the memory of
Easter Rising'
3.15 Tea/Coffee
3.30 Keynote
address: Dr Emmet O’Connor (University of Ulster)
How radical was the Proclamation?
4.30 Final
discussion chaired by Dr John Gibney (Trinity College,
Dublin)
Admission to this conference
is free but pre-registration is advisable.
To register, email your name
and institutional/university details (if any) to
proclamationconference@gmail.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)