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Irish Folklore & Mythology, General & Miscellaneous Irish Fiction & Prose Literature - Literary Criticism
Locating Irish Folklore: Tradition, Modernity, Identity by Diarmuid O Giollain — book cover

Locating Irish Folklore: Tradition, Modernity, Identity

by Diarmuid O Giollain
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Overview

‘Folklore’ is both subject matter and critical discourse, amateur enthusiasm and academic discipline, a resource for committed nation-builders and for local historians. As an introduction to Irish folklore from an Irish perspective, this book develops a theoretical understanding of the dynamics of folklore, and questions its role in society.

There are few cultures which offer as much scope for an analysis of this sort as Ireland and the author usefully locates the Irish experience within a comparative framework, using ethnography from Nordic countries and theory from Latin America. Irish Folklore defines the notion of folklore and examines the pivotal role it plays in identity formation, and how it is used by various groups for their own legitimisation.

The first of its kind this book is a key text for the study of folklore in Ireland and will be of interest to anyone working in the area of Irish Cultural Studies ethnography or anthropology.

Synopsis

Folklore is both subject matter and critical discourse, amateur enthusiasm and academic discipline, a resource for committed nation-builders and for local historians. As an introduction to Irish folklore from an Irish perspective, this book develops a theoretical understanding of the dynamics of folklore, and questions its role in society.There are few cultures which offer as much scope for an analysis of this sort as Ireland and the author usefully locates the Irish experience within a comparative framework, using ethnography from Nordic countries and theory from Latin America. Irish Folklore defines the notion of folklore and examines the pivotal role it plays in identity formation, and how it is used by various groups for their own legitimisation. The first of its kind this book is a key text for the study of folklore in Ireland and will be of interest to anyone working in the area of Irish Cultural Studies ethnography or anthropology.

New Hibernia Review

For the folklorist, ethnologist, or cultural anthropologist interested in Ireland, the value of (this book is clear. This is the first book-length investigation of Irish conception of folklore and Irish ethnological research agendas over time. As a study of the historical and sociopolitical contexts in which folklorist discourse emerged and evolved, (this work has a major role to pay in current reexaminations of the moral, political and philosophical underpinnings of the study of traditional and popular culture in Ireland and elsewhere.

About the Author, Diarmuid O Giollain

Diarmuid Ó Giolláin Deptartment of Folklore, University College, Cork, is one of the respected few working at a theoretical level on the relationship of folklore to national identity. His work is based on prodigious reading, and experience of many national contexts in which the role of folklore has played a part.

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Editorials

New Hibernia Review

For the folklorist, ethnologist, or cultural anthropologist interested in Ireland, the value of (this book is clear. This is the first book-length investigation of Irish conception of folklore and Irish ethnological research agendas over time. As a study of the historical and sociopolitical contexts in which folklorist discourse emerged and evolved, (this work has a major role to pay in current reexaminations of the moral, political and philosophical underpinnings of the study of traditional and popular culture in Ireland and elsewhere.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2000
Publisher
Cork University Press
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781859181690

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