It is the 1960s, and Ireland is hoping to join what will later become the European Union. The government has devised a plan to stem emigration and save the Irish language by supporting small factories in the Gaeltacht, traditional Irish-speaking villages in remote western areas. But is the plan working?

With her signature humor and charm, Eileen Kane transports the reader to County Donegal with a detailed account of rural Irish life during this period of rapid change. This is a story about people living beyond the margins of maps, boundaries, language groups, and government departments – people bound by borders that have little or no correspondence to their own cultural, economic, and historical margins. Ultimately, it is a story about life on the edges, and the places and people who fall outside them.

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This lively anthropological memoir captures a pivotal moment in the history of Ireland and the revitalization of the Irish language.

Preface
Prologue
1. November (Mí na Samhna) 1966
2. December (Mí na Nollag) 1966
3. January (Mí Eanáir) 1967
4. February (Mí Feabhra) 1967
5. March (Mí Márta) 1967
6. April (Mí Aibreáinn) 1967
7. May (Mí Bealtaine) 1967
8. June (Mí Meithimh) 1967
9. July (Mí Lúil) 1967
10. August (Mí Lúnasa) 1967
11. September (Mí Mheán Fómhair) 1967
12. October (Mí Dheireadh Fómhair) 1967
13. November (Mí na Samhna) 1967
14. December (Mí na Nollag) 1967
15. January (Mí Eanáir) 1968
16. February (Mí Feabhra) 1968
17. March (An Márta) 1968
Epilogue

Bibliography

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Product details

ISBN
9781487544997
Published
2022-10-06
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Weight
460 gr
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Thickness
19 mm
Age
U, P, 05, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
340

Author

Biographical note

Eileen Kane is an applied anthropologist who established and chaired the first department of anthropology in Ireland. She is the author of Trickster.