Derick Thomson and the Gaelic Revival - by Petra Johana Poncarová (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Derick Thomson was one of the most influential personalities of Gaelic Scotland in the twentieth century.
- Author(s): Petra Johana Poncarová
- 208 Pages
- Literary Criticism, European
Description
About the Book
Explores Derick Thomson's far-reaching influence on the 20th-century revival of Scottish Gaelic
Book Synopsis
Derick Thomson was one of the most influential personalities of Gaelic Scotland in the twentieth century. His poetry counts among the best written in the language; he founded the most important modern Gaelic journal, Gairm, and was the force behind many ventures aimed at the preservation and development of Gaelic. He made major contributions to Gaelic studies as an academic subject and his publications are still indispensable to all working in the field. Thomson's vision of the Gaelic revival is characterised by high standards, organisational and economic shrewdness, openness to second-language users, and broad European outlook.
This is the very first book-length study devoted to Thomson and it explores his career within the context of the history of the Gaelic revival in Scotland and other minority-language movements in Europe
Review Quotes
an engaging and accessible book--Dr Proinsias Ó Drisceoil, author of Seán Ó Dálaigh: Éigse agus Iomarbhá "Comhar"
An enriching and hugely readable evocation of one of Scotland's most influential yet underappreciated literary figures. Derick Thomson's impact across poetry, academia, publishing, and language activism has been significantly undervalued - until now. This is the most stimulating book on Gaelic literature I've read in years. If only more of modern Scotland's writers' contributions were explored with such an edifying blend of diligent research, intellectual lucidity, and human understanding.--Kevin MacNeil, University of Stirling
From its outset, Poncarová's monograph represents a significant achievement: a culmination of more than a decade's meticulous incremental scholarship and a fitting exploration of the breathtaking corpus of work and activism, for Gaelic and for Scotland, produced by one of the twentieth century's greatest intellectuals and creative writers, Derick Thomson (Ruaraidh MacThòmais).--Kate Louise Mathis, University of Edinburgh, and Michel Byrne, University of Glasgow "https: //muse.jhu.edu/article/945012"
Petra Johana Poncarová's probing but accessible new study of Thomson's role in the modern Gaelic revival makes an important addition not only to our understanding of Thomson's personal contribution but also to the surprisingly understudied field of modern Gaelic cultural history more generally. [...] Derick Thomson and the Gaelic Revival is a valuable and original contribution to our understanding of Gaelic history in the twentieth century and how Thomson combined political commitment, organisational energy and artistic integrity to defend and promote his language and culture.--Wilson McLeod, Emeritus Professor of Gaelic, University of Edinburgh "The Bottle Imp"
Lucid, thoughtful and comparative: the scale of Derick Thomson's achievement is now clear thanks to this Czech scholar's extraordinary work.
--Murray Pittock, University of Glasgow