In 1994, the Irish Studies Research Centre of the University of Caen Lower Normandy invited John McGahern, as his novel The Barracks was one of the set works for the Agrégation. The Irish writer was delighted to meet Prof. Paul Brennan who was the head of the Research Centre. They had much in common: both were born in the 1930s in the North West of the Republic of Ireland into large Catholic families; both had a father who was a Garda. Addressing a packed l..
Strong cultural, commercial, literary and intellectual links have existed for many centuries between...
Aguisíní, published by Coiscéim and the Institute for Irish Studies in NUIG, brings together occasio...
This book is dedicated to the late Professor Werner Huber whose contribution to Irish studies in Aus...
Since he passed away in 2006, John McGahern’s status as Ireland’s foremost prose writer in English h...
The name Pierre Joannon is synonymous with Irish studies and with Franco-Irish relations. I can thin...
This article arose out of a collaboration between the two authors, Eamon Maher, a McGahern “expert,”...
John McGahern’s first novel, The Barracks , was published 50 years ago, thus marking the arrival of ...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. St. John Fisher College has just l...
The story of the Fitzgerald dynasty is, in many ways, the story of colonial Ireland: for almos...
During the course of a historical examination of any given time period, persons and events are remem...
John McGahern’s work has dominated the Irish literary landscape for almost forty years. First render...
Patrick Pearse, protean figure of Irish nationalism, here finds a volume worthy of his multiple inca...
I wonder how many people are aware of the worker-priest movement in France? It began when Cardinal S...
Edité chez Four Courts Press, sous la direction scientifique de Jane Conroy, qui signe l’introductio...
John McGahern's work has dominated the Irish literary landscape for almost forty years. First render...
Strong cultural, commercial, literary and intellectual links have existed for many centuries between...
Aguisíní, published by Coiscéim and the Institute for Irish Studies in NUIG, brings together occasio...
This book is dedicated to the late Professor Werner Huber whose contribution to Irish studies in Aus...
Since he passed away in 2006, John McGahern’s status as Ireland’s foremost prose writer in English h...
The name Pierre Joannon is synonymous with Irish studies and with Franco-Irish relations. I can thin...
This article arose out of a collaboration between the two authors, Eamon Maher, a McGahern “expert,”...
John McGahern’s first novel, The Barracks , was published 50 years ago, thus marking the arrival of ...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. St. John Fisher College has just l...
The story of the Fitzgerald dynasty is, in many ways, the story of colonial Ireland: for almos...
During the course of a historical examination of any given time period, persons and events are remem...
John McGahern’s work has dominated the Irish literary landscape for almost forty years. First render...
Patrick Pearse, protean figure of Irish nationalism, here finds a volume worthy of his multiple inca...
I wonder how many people are aware of the worker-priest movement in France? It began when Cardinal S...
Edité chez Four Courts Press, sous la direction scientifique de Jane Conroy, qui signe l’introductio...
John McGahern's work has dominated the Irish literary landscape for almost forty years. First render...
Strong cultural, commercial, literary and intellectual links have existed for many centuries between...
Aguisíní, published by Coiscéim and the Institute for Irish Studies in NUIG, brings together occasio...
This book is dedicated to the late Professor Werner Huber whose contribution to Irish studies in Aus...