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El. knyga: Irish/ness Is All Around Us: Language Revivalism and the Culture of Ethnic Identity in Northern Ireland

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Focusing on Irish speakers in Catholic West Belfast, this ethnography on Irish language and identity explores the complexities of changing, and contradictory, senses of Irishness and shifting practices of 'Irish culture' in the domains of language, music, dance and sports. The authors theoretical approach to ethnicity and ethnic revivals presents an expanded explanatory framework for the social (re)production of ethnicity, theorizing the mutual interrelations between representations and cultural practices regarding their combined capacity to engender ethnic revivals. Relevant not only to readers with an interest in the intricacies of the Northern Irish situation, this book also appeals to a broader readership in anthropology, sociology, cultural studies, history and political science concerned with the mechanisms behind ethnonational conflict and the politics of culture and identity in general.

Recenzijos

While the structure of the book is sometimes heavy, it remains rich in insights and shows theoretical flair. It will be of interest to people who want to know how Irish revitalists navigate ethnicity in Northern Ireland. The methodology is thorough, placing the experiences of the participants in conversation with social structures. Certainly, the theoretical contributions will be of interest to scholars of nationalism and ethnicity. · Canadian Journal of Irish Studies





This book will be of interest to linguistic anthropologists, cultural anthropologists, as well as sociologists, political scientists, and historians of Ireland and Northern Ireland. It will also be valuable to those interested in cultural identity formation within politically charged contexts, including postcolonial contexts. It complements and extends the existing research on political identities in Northern Ireland. · American Ethnologist





This is a thoroughly well-written, thought-provoking, and fascinating work which should appeal to ethnographers and linguistic anthropologists as well as to scholars working on language revival movements, particularly those of marginalised, minority languages. Zenker does well to contribute to debates about the politics of language and identity and to notions of place, nationhood, personhood, and autochthony He writes with zeal and passion about a topic he is not only interested in and obviously fascinated by, but has experienced himself: learning Irish culture through learning the language. · Anthropological Forum: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Comparative Sociology





Zenkers prisme théorique allows him to present individualized and collectivized autochthony as new framework for understanding Irish identity in Catholic West Belfast. In making sense of it all in this way, and in his repudiation of narrow constructivism , Zenker effectively takes up the cudgels of [ Richard] Jenkins and [ Thomas Hylland] Eriksen in relocating the stuff of culture in the anthropology of ethnic identity. In short, this book is a valuable study of an important and highly politicized issue. · Journal of Linguistic Anthropology





This is a beautifully nuanced, richly detailed ethnography of Irish-speaking, and Irish-speakers, in contemporary West Belfast. ... As an exploration of the cultural stuff, rather than group boundary maintenance, it makes an important contribution to post-Barthian ethnicity studies. ... It is one of the very best ethnographies of Belfast that I have read. Superb. · Richard Jenkins, University of Sheffield





This is a well-researched and engaging text which sheds new light on the issues attending language revivalism in Ireland and its intersection with historic conflict in N. Ireland. The author explains his methodology clearly throughout in a way that allows theoretical issues to be integrated comfortably within the central narrative. · Fionntįn de Brśn, University of Ulster

List of Maps, Figures and Tables
ix
Acknowledgements - Buiochas xi
Glossary xiii
Prologue
1 A Walk of Life: Entering Catholic West Belfast
3(18)
2 Framing the Research: Analytical Approach and Methodology An
21(22)
Analytical Framework for the Study of Ethnic Identity (and the Irish Language)
22(14)
On Methodology
36(7)
PART I The Irish Language in Catholic West Belfast
3 Failte isteach -- Welcome In
43(12)
4 Becoming a Gaeilgeoir
55(36)
Roibeard, age 63
56(5)
Ronan, age 61
61(5)
Mairead, age 58
66(2)
Micheal, age 55
68(5)
Donal, age 49
73(2)
Fiona, age 47
75(2)
Pol, age 47
77(4)
Padraigin, age 40
81(3)
Sinead, age 33
84(2)
Caoimhin, age 17
86(2)
Preliminary Observations
88(3)
5 On Prophets, Godfathers, Rebels and Prostitutes: A Contemporary History of the Irish language in Catholic West Belfast
91(30)
Emerging Structural Contexts for the Irish Language in the 1950s: A Prehistory
94(5)
Prophets on the Moral `High Meadow': The Cumann Cluain
99(5)
From a Hedge(d) School to Irish Language Industries: Godfathers of the Irish Language
104(5)
Rebels with/out a Political Cause: The Jailtacht and Beyond
109(6)
Prostitutes of the Irish Language?
115(3)
Conclusions
118(3)
6 `Our own native language': Local Representations and Practices of the Irish Language
121(28)
Between Purism and Pragmatism: The Micro-Dynamics of Irish Language Usage
122(6)
The Political Hijacking of the Irish Language Revival: The Meso-Dynamics of Supply and Demand
128(5)
`Our own native language?': The Macro-Dynamics of Rights Activism, Ethnicism and Nationalism
133(10)
Conclusions
143(6)
PART II Irish Identity in Catholic West Belfast
7 `It's part of what we are': Identifying Identity
149(12)
8 Becoming (Aware of) Who You Are: Irish
161(40)
Roibeard, age 63
162(3)
Ronan, age 61
165(4)
Mairead, age 58
169(5)
Micheal, age 55
174(3)
Donal, age 49
177(8)
Fiona, age 47
185(2)
Pol, age 47
187(2)
Padraigin, age 40
189(4)
Sinead, age 33
193(2)
Caoimhin, age 17
195(3)
Preliminary Observations
198(3)
9 Casting Nets of Identity: A Contemporary History of Irishness in Catholic West Belfast
201(36)
`A constant counter-narrative to the dominant narrative of the society': Emerging Structural Contexts for/eclosing Irishness in Northern Ireland
204(5)
No (Games, Just Sports? Gaelic Games and the Playground of Catholic West Belfast
209(7)
`If you feel like singing, do sing an Irish song': Irish Music in Catholic West Belfast
216(9)
Knowing How to Do your Sevens: Dancing to the Tune of Irishness in Catholic West Belfast
225(8)
Conclusions
233(4)
10 `Something inside so strong': Local Representations and Practices of Irishness
237(32)
What it Takes to be Irish
241(6)
The Irishness of Protestants and the Politics of a Classificatory Anomaly
247(7)
Autochthony as the Causal Logic behind Ethnicity
254(10)
Conclusions
264(5)
Epilogue
11 `Trying to make sense of it all': Identity Matters in Catholic West Belfast
269(12)
Post Scriptum
Bibliography 281(14)
Index 295
Olaf Zenker is Junior Professor at the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Freie Universität Berlin. He received his PhD from the Martin Luther University and the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle/Saale, Germany, and obtained his habilitation from the University of Bern, Switzerland. His publications include the co-edited volume Beyond Writing Culture: Current Intersections of Epistemologies and Representational Practices (Berghahn Books, 2010).