Mairtin O Cadhain's CRE Na Cille: A Narratological Approach. Mairtin O Cadhain's CRE Na Cille: A Narratological Approach.

Mairtin O Cadhain's CRE Na Cille: A Narratological Approach‪.‬

Irish University Review: a journal of Irish Studies 2006, Autumn-Winter, 36, 2

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Publisher Description

Mairtin O Cadhain's novel Cre na Cille (Graveyard Soil) won the Oireachtas literary competition in 1947. Recognized almost immediately as a classic, the book, set among the dead in a Conamara graveyard, was serialized in the Irish Press between February and September of 1949, the same year it was published in Dublin by Sairseal agus O Marcaigh. O Cadhain, responding to suggestions that he was inspired by Dostoevsky, claimed that his inspiration actually came from a throwaway comment he heard after digging a grave for an elderly resident of An Cnocan Glas (1) in the winter of 1944-5 The novel's chief protagonist appears to be a woman, Caitriona Phaidin, who has died and entered the graveyard only to discover that even there she will not find the peace she expected. Instead, she joins a cacophonic and multi-voiced argument between the many local villagers (and some strangers) who have preceded her. From the news she brings, the information we hear from the already-dead, and fresher input from those who follow her, we piece together the fragments of multiple narratives, some concerning the real-time goings-on in the graveyard and the village, and some concerning earlier events that the dead are doomed to replay and reanalyze for eternity.

GENRE
Reference
RELEASED
2006
22 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
41
Pages
PUBLISHER
Irish University Review
SIZE
381.1
KB

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