Irish-language discourse features a pervasive system of practices involving the production and dissemination of directly reported speech. These homologous practices, here termed personation, include brief imitations of others in conversational speech, the use of direct voice in several poetic genres, the Irish-language song tradition, and a few influential novels. Personation is motivated by a semiotic ideology (personalism) which naturalizes speech and other expressive behavior as an immediate aspect of a person's social being. It is argued that personation, as a semiotic practice, motivates Irish-speakers' resistance to various attempts, centered in discourses of the nation and the state, to refigure the Irish language as the "voice" of a...
Audio accompanying Kathleen Sheehan Lambert's Ph. D. thesis; recording of Leanbán Chonaill, interpre...
‘Plastic and proud’?: discourses of authenticity among the second-generation Irish in EnglandThis pa...
This report presents research findings about the background, practice and ideologies of ‘new speake...
Irish-language discourse features a pervasive system of practices involving the production and disse...
Drawing on the framework of authenticity and anonymity, this article explores the Irish State’s mobi...
Almost 2 million people in the North and South of Ireland identify as Irish speakers and an estimate...
While traditional Irish-speaking communities continue to decline, the number of second-language spea...
peer-reviewedThe people of Ireland have a complex relationship with the Irish language. Until the mi...
For over 400 years, dramatists, novelists, and other writers seeking to depict Irish characters have...
This article looks at the historicisation of the native speaker and ideologies of authenticity and a...
This volume is the first full-length publication to systematically unpack and analyze the linguistic...
This project is an interdisciplinary and comparative investigation of the reproduction of linguistic...
Irish people in England are identified by the English largely through the way they speak. This is ho...
This paper explores the case of Ireland as an <em>anti-litteram </em>postcolonial contex...
This paper offers a preliminary analysis of linguistic mudes in the case of new speakers of Irish, n...
Audio accompanying Kathleen Sheehan Lambert's Ph. D. thesis; recording of Leanbán Chonaill, interpre...
‘Plastic and proud’?: discourses of authenticity among the second-generation Irish in EnglandThis pa...
This report presents research findings about the background, practice and ideologies of ‘new speake...
Irish-language discourse features a pervasive system of practices involving the production and disse...
Drawing on the framework of authenticity and anonymity, this article explores the Irish State’s mobi...
Almost 2 million people in the North and South of Ireland identify as Irish speakers and an estimate...
While traditional Irish-speaking communities continue to decline, the number of second-language spea...
peer-reviewedThe people of Ireland have a complex relationship with the Irish language. Until the mi...
For over 400 years, dramatists, novelists, and other writers seeking to depict Irish characters have...
This article looks at the historicisation of the native speaker and ideologies of authenticity and a...
This volume is the first full-length publication to systematically unpack and analyze the linguistic...
This project is an interdisciplinary and comparative investigation of the reproduction of linguistic...
Irish people in England are identified by the English largely through the way they speak. This is ho...
This paper explores the case of Ireland as an <em>anti-litteram </em>postcolonial contex...
This paper offers a preliminary analysis of linguistic mudes in the case of new speakers of Irish, n...
Audio accompanying Kathleen Sheehan Lambert's Ph. D. thesis; recording of Leanbán Chonaill, interpre...
‘Plastic and proud’?: discourses of authenticity among the second-generation Irish in EnglandThis pa...
This report presents research findings about the background, practice and ideologies of ‘new speake...