The Islandman: The Hidden Life of Tomás O’Crohan

Irene Lucchitti
4.17
6 ratings 1 reviews
This book concerns Tomas O'Crohan of the Blasket Islands and offers a radical reinterpretation of this iconic Irish figure and his place in Gaelic literature. It examines the politics of Irish culture that turned O'Crohan into The Islandman and harnessed his texts to the national political project, presenting him as an instinctual, natural hero and a naive, almost unwilling writer, and his texts as artefacts of unselfconscious, unmediated linguistic and ethnographic authenticity. The author demonstrates that such misleading claims, never properly scrutinised before this study, have been to the detriment of the author's literary reputation and that they have obscured the deeply personal and highly idiosyncratic purpose and nature of his writing. At the core of the book is a recognition that what O'Crohan wrote was not primarily a history, nor an ethnography, but an autobiography. The book demonstrates that the conventional reading of the texts, which privileges O'Crohan's fisherman identity, has hidden from view the writer protagonist inscribed in the texts, subordinating his identity as a writer to his identity as a peasant. The author shows O'Crohan to have been a literary pioneer who negotiated the journey from oral tradition into literature as well as a modern, self-aware man of letters engaging deliberately and artistically with questions of mortality.
Genres:
232 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
2 (33%)
4 star
3 (50%)
3 star
1 (17%)
2 star
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Irene Lucchitti

Lists with this book

This I Know
The Joy Luck Club
Not Her Daughter
Mother-Daughter Novels
95 books72 voters
Revelation X: The Bob Apocryphon, Hidden Teachings and Deuterocanonical Texts of J.R. Bob Dobbs
Hidden Figures
The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate: Discoveries from a Secret World
"Hidden" From Obscurity
364 books15 voters