Le Ríona Nic Congáil,
Arlen House 2024,
ISBN 9781851323173,
Lth/400,
Is saothar nuálaíoch é Úna Ní Fhaircheallaigh agus an Fhís Útóipeach Ghaelach a dhéanann athbhreithniú ar an meon a spreag giniúint agus fás ghluaiseacht na hathbheochana in Éirinn ó aimsir an fin de siècle ar aghaidh. Trí staidéar beathaisnéiseach a dhéanamh ar Úna Ní Fhaircheallaigh, an bhean ba theanntásaí i saol na Gaeilge i rith na tréimhse sin, tugtar léargas úr ar thionchar na n-óg ar athbheochan na Gaeilge, agus déantar athléamh ar fheidhm agus ar thábhacht na mban sa ghluaiseacht úd, bíodh an litríocht, an spórt, cúrsaí léinn, cúrsaí polaitíochta, nó feachtais ar son na cothromaíochta inscne i gceist. Léirítear tionchar smaointeachas an útóipeachais – a raibh borradh faoi sa naoú haois déag – ar lucht na hathbheochana agus déantar scagadh ar an gcineál útóipeachais, mar atá, an fhís útóipeach Ghaelach, a ghríosaigh leasaitheoirí sóisialta an náisiúnachais chultúrtha chun cúl a thabhairt le stair ghránna an naoú haois déag agus chun malairt todhchaí a shamhlú agus a chur chun cinn in Éirinn san fhichiú haois.
Úna Ní Fhairchellaigh and the Irish Utopian Vision is an innovative work that reviews the mindset that inspired the generation and growth of the revival movement in Ireland from the time of the fin de siècle onwards. By conducting a biographical study of Úna Ní Fhaircheallaigh, the most influential woman in the Irish language during that period, a fresh insight is given into the influence of young people on the revival of the Irish language, and a re-reading of the function and importance of women in the movement so, be it literature, sport, academic matters, political matters, or campaigns for gender balance. The influence of utopian thinking – which flourished in the nineteenth century – on the revivalists is shown and the type of utopianism, namely, the Gaelic utopian vision, which urged the social reformers of cultural nationalism to give back to the ugly history of the nineteenth century and to imagine and promote a different future in Ireland in the twentieth century.







Reviews
There are no reviews yet.