An Irish-Speaking Island
State, Religion, Community, and the Linguistic Landscape
in Ireland, 1770–1870
Nicholas M. Wolf
Winner, Michael J. Durkan Prize for Books on Language and Culture, American Conference for Irish Studies Winner, Donald Murphy Prize for Distinguished First Books, American Conference for Irish Studies
History of Ireland and the Irish Diaspora
James S. Donnelly, Jr., and Thomas
Archdeacon, Series Editors
“This is a major and original contribution, not least for its thorough use of
Irish-language archival sources.”
—Pádraig Ó Macháin, University College Cork
After 1770, Ireland experienced the establishment of modern forms of Irish
Catholicism, new engagement by the public with the political process, and the
growth of the modern state, represented by new legal and educational systems.
An Irish-Speaking Island investigates the role in these developments of
the population who spoke Irish in their daily lives—whether as a first or second
language—and links the history of language contact and bilingualism with the
broader history of Ireland in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
As late as 1840, Ireland had as many as four million Irish speakers—a significant
proportion of the total population—who could be found in every county
of the island and in all social classes and religious persuasions. Their impact on
the modern history of Ireland and the United Kingdom cannot be captured by a
simple conclusion that they became anglicized. Rather, Nicholas M. Wolf explores
the complex ways in which the transition from Irish to English placed a premium
on adaptive bilingualism and shaped beliefs and behavior in the domestic sphere,
religious life, and oral culture within the community. An Irish-Speaking Island
will interest not only historians but also scholars of linguistics, folklore, politics,
literature, and religion.
Nicholas M. Wolf is an assistant professor
and faculty fellow at Glucksman Ireland
House, New York University. |
Praise
“Wolf brings to his analysis an impressive familiarity with both official and Irish-language sources, and a sophisticated engagement with the literature on contemporary and historical language change. His arguments are both ingenious and convincing.”
—English Historical Review
“This important work should serve as a wake-up call to those who still insist on a simplistic and a historical view of the Irish language in Ireland, both past and present. An Irish-speaking Island is no less than a call to give Irish back to the Irish.”
—The Irish Times
“A conversation changer, a paradigm changer, a critical impetus to new lines of debate. Wolf draws intelligently and exhaustively on archival records to detail the persistence of the Irish language during an era when, according to our long-standing assumptions, the language was supposedly dying, yet—as Wolf amply substantiates—was in fact everywhere in use.”
—citation, Michael J. Durkan Prize for Books on Language & Culture, American Conference for Irish Studies
“Wolf shatters the dominant historical narrative, demonstrating that, in the century before 1870, Ireland was not an anglicized kingdom but was capable of articulating modernity in the Irish language. He offers a
dynamic account of the complexity of the island, its institutional development, and the parallel evolution of language usage across all sections of society. Essential reading.”
—Dáire Keogh, St. Patrick’s
College, Dublin
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November 2014
LC: 2014007460 PB
416 pp. 6 x 9
6 tables
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