Máire Mhac an tSaoi

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Máire Mhac an tSaoi (born 4 April 1922)[1][2] is an Irish language scholar, poet, writer and academic of modern literature in Irish.[3][4] Along with Seán Ó Ríordáin and Máirtín Ó Direáin she is, in the words of Louis de Paor, "one of a trinity of poets who revolutionised Irish language poetry in the 1940s and 50s."[5]

Early life[]

Mhac an tSaoi was born as Máire MacEntee in Dublin in 1922. Her father, Seán MacEntee, was born in Belfast and was a veteran of the Easter Rising, the Irish War of Independence, and of the Anti-Treaty IRA during the Irish Civil War. MacEntee was also a founding member of Fianna Fáil, a long-serving TD and Tánaiste in the Dáil and, ultimately, the Taoiseach of the Irish Republic. Her mother, County Tipperary-born Margaret Browne (or de Brún), a teacher at Alexandra College, was also an Irish republican. Her uncle Monsignor Pádraig de Brún was one of the most respected scholars of the Irish language in the twentieth century. Her other uncle was the Traditionalist Catholic Cardinal Michael Browne, who was Master of the Dominican Order and, in his later life, a friend and ally of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.

As Máire's mother was a teacher of Irish, she grew up immersed in the surviving Bardic poetry and in "the medieval aristocratic tradition of courtly love poems in Irish." She was also, according to Louis De Paor, heavily influenced by her stays with her uncle, Monsignor De Brún, in the County Kerry Gaeltacht surrounding Dún Chaoin. As De Paor writes, she discovered in Dún Chaoin, "a living tradition and a community conscious of its literary and linguistic inheritance, a world in which verbal artistry by accomplished speakers capable of responding to the impulse of the momentum sophisticated extemporary compositions. The extent to which the Gaeltacht of her early life was an imagined as well as an actual place has been acknowledged by the poet herself, but her relationship to 'the miraculous parish,' of Dún Chaoin is both the cornerstone of both her poetry and her poetics."[6]

Máire studied Modern Languages and Celtic Studies at University College Dublin, before going to further research at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies and at the Sorbonne.[7]

Literary career[]

According to Louis De Paor, "Máire Mhac an tSaoi spent two years studying in post-war Paris (1945-47) before joining the Irish diplomatic service, and was working at the Irish embassy in Madrid, during Franco's regime, when she committed herself to writing poetry in Irish following her discovery of the works of Federico Garcia Lorca. The tension between religious beliefs, contemporary social mores, and the more transgressive elements of female desire is central to the best of her work from the 1940s and early 50s. Both her deference to traditional patterns of language and verse and her refusal of traditional morality might be read as a reaction to the social, moral, and cultural upheaval of a world at war."[8]

She remains a prolific poet and has been credited, along with Seán Ó Ríordáin and Máirtín Ó Direáin, with belatedly introducing literary modernism into Irish literature in the Irish-language in the years and decades following World War II. According to De Paor, "Máire Mhac an Tsaoi's poetry draws on the vernacular spoken by the native Irish speakers of the Munster Gaeltacht of West Kerry during the first half of the twentieth century. Formally, she draws on the song metres of the oral tradition and on older models from the earlier literary tradition, including the syllabic metres of the early modern period. The combination of spoken dialect enhanced by references and usages drawn from the older literature, and regular metrical forms contribute to a poetic voice that seems to with the accumulated authority of an unbroken tradition. In the later work, she explores looser verse forms but continues to draw on the remembered dialect of Dún Chaoin and on a scholarly knowledge of the older literature."[9]

She was elected to Aosdána in 1996, but resigned in 1997 after Francis Stuart was elevated to the position of Saoi. Mhac an tSaoi had voted against Stuart because of his role as an Abwehr spy and in radio propaganda broadcasts from Nazi Germany aimed at neutral Ireland during World War II.[10] Her poem "Jack" and short story An Bhean Óg both have featured on the Leaving Certificate Irish course, at both Higher and Ordinary Levels, from 2006 to 2010.

Mhac an tSaoi has had a lifelong passion for the Irish language, and is today one of the leading authorities on Munster Irish.

Personal life[]

In 1962, she married Irish politician, writer, and historian Conor Cruise O'Brien (1917–2008) in a Roman Catholic Wedding Mass in Dublin. This made Máire the stepmother to O'Brien's children from his 1939 civil marriage.

She travelled with him to the Republic of the Congo when he was chosen as by Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld as the United Nations representative there during the Katanga Crisis. Máire then lived with her husband in New York City, where he worked as a Humanities professor at NYU after the Katanga Crisis ended O'Brien's diplomatic career. She later returned with him to live in Dublin.

The O'Briens later adopted two children, Patrick and Margaret.

List of works[]

Mhac an tSaoi wrote:

  • Margadh na Saoire (Baile Átha Cliath: Sáirséal agus Dill, 1956)
  • Codladh an Ghaiscigh (1973)
  • An Galar Dubhach (1980)
  • An Cion go dtí Seo (1987)
  • "Writing In Modern Irish — A Benign Anachronism?", The Southern Review, 31 Special Issue on Irish Poetry (1995)
  • The Same Age as the State, O'Brien Press, Dublin ISBN 0-86278-885-4; ISBN 978-0-86278-885-8
  • Cérbh í Meg Russell?, Leabhar Breac, ISBN 978-0-89833-232-2 (2008).
  • Scéal Ghearóid Iarla, Leabhar Breac, ISBN 978-0-898332-53-7 (2010).

Mhac an tSaoi and O'Brien together wrote:

  • A Concise History of Ireland, Thames and Hudson, London ISBN 0-500-45011-0 (1972)

Mhac an tSaoi translated Rainer Maria Rilke:

  • Marbhnaí Duino (Duineser Elegien), Leabhar Breac, ISBN 978-0-898332-84-1 (2013)

References[]

  1. ^ Impala Publications minibio confirming 1922 as year of Mhac an tSaoi's birth
  2. ^ O'Brien, Máire (2004). The Same Age as the State. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 340. ISBN 0299210308.
  3. ^ "Authors profile - Máire Mhac an tSaoi". Cois Life. Archived from the original on 2007-02-24. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
  4. ^ "Máire Mhac an tSaoi". Irish Writers on line. Archived from the original on 2007-06-30. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
  5. ^ Louis de Paor, 'Réamhrá/Introduction', Máire Mhac an tSaoi, An Paróiste Míorúilteach (Dublin, 2011)
  6. ^ Louis De Paor (2016), Leabhar na hAthghabhála: Poems of Repossession: Irish-English Bilingual Edition, Bloodaxe Books. Page 130.
  7. ^ Louis De Paor (2016), Leabhar na hAthghabhála: Poems of Repossession: Irish-English Bilingual Edition, Bloodaxe Books. Page 130.
  8. ^ Louis De Paor (2016), Leabhar na hAthghabhála: Poems of Repossession: Irish-English Bilingual Edition, Bloodaxe Books. Page 23.
  9. ^ Louis De Paor (2016), Leabhar na hAthghabhála: Poems of Repossession: Irish-English Bilingual Edition, Bloodaxe Books. Page 130-130.
  10. ^ "Francis Stuart". Former Members. Aosdána. Retrieved 29 January 2015. and "Máire Mhac an tSaoi". Former Members. Aosdána. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
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