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Poetry Today: Victoria Kennefick and Madeleine Wattenberg « Kenyon Review Blog kenyonreview.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kenyonreview.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
ALAN Riach picks up from his essays on Niyi Osundare and African anglophone literature to ask a few pertinent questions about the virtues of translation and migrant identities, and what is “translation” anyway? THE African writers we looked at a fortnight ago are accessible to those of us who read only English but we can’t simply ignore the indigenous languages beyond English, any more than we can forget Scots and Gaelic. Imperialism suppressed languages in Africa as it did in Scotland, and linguistic imperialism sums up all other kinds. Understanding this is essential if we have any worthwhile hope for a new Scotland, so it applies very forcefully to Michael Fry’s assessment of Gaelic in Scotland, “We need more than political gestures to save Gaelic culture” (The National, April 20) and to the powerful letters in response to it from Jim Finnie, Derrick McClure and George Pattison, “Gaelic is only a ‘dying’ language because it was beaten out of us!” ....
Updated / Thursday, 4 Feb 2021 11:18 Coming up in the Poetry Programme on Sunday 7th February, at 7:30 pm on RTÉ Radio 1, Moya Cannon publishes a lifetime of work, and we hear poems about the Mother and Baby Homes from Annemarie Ní Churreáin and Kimberly Campanello. Moya Cannon Moya Cannon s first published collection, Oar, won the 1991 Brendan Behan Memorial Award. She has also won the O Shaughnessy Award and was Heimbold Professor of Irish Studies at Villanova University in 2011. She has been editor of Poetry Ireland Review and is a member of Aosdána. She joins presenter Olivia O’Leary to talk about her ....
Books to look out for in 2021 Irish fiction New work that has been a long time coming generates a particular shiver of anticipation. Small Things Like These (Faber, October) will be Claire Keegan’s first new work since her novella Foster, still a bestseller 10 years on. Her publisher says: “An exquisite wintery parable, Claire Keegan’s long-awaited return tells the story of a simple act of courage and tenderness, in the face of conformity, fear and judgment.” Small Things Like These (Faber, October) will be Claire Keegan’s first new work since her novella Foster, still a bestseller 10 years on. Photograph: Alan Betson ....