Ùr-sgeul

Ùr-sgeul is an independent publisher of new Scottish Gaelic prose. The name Ùr-sgeul is a Gaelic word which translates variously as: a romance, a novel or a recent tale.[1]

Contents

History

Ùr-sgeul was founded in 2003 as a project to promote new Gaelic fiction. The project was conceived under the auspices of the Gaelic Books Council and with a start-up grant of £50K from the Scottish Arts Council.[2] In its short history, Ùr-sgeul has been prolific, and has contributed significantly to the recent resurgence of the Gaelic novel.[3][4]

Ùr-sgeul's most critically successful title to date was the epic novel, An Oidhche Mus Do Sheòl Sinn, by Aonghas Pàdraig Caimbeul. Heavily influenced in both structure and theme by the works of Leo Tolstoy, An Oidhche Mus Do Sheòl Sinn was short-listed for the Saltire Book of the Year Award in 2004.[5]

In 2008, Ùr-sgeul was featured on the half-hour Gaelic arts program on BBC2, Ealtainn. In 2008, Ùr-sgeul also branched into avant-garde music publishing and released a CD mixing Gaelic prose and modern Gaelic music by the rock band, Na Gathan.[6] That same year, Ùr-sgeul approached Bòrd na Gàidhlig for support to expand its activities, including provision of a full-time editor. The approach was not supported.[7]

In 2009, Ùr-Sgeul published the first ever German-Gaelic fiction publication Der Schadel von Damien Hirst, launched at the FilmAlba festival in Bonn, Germany.

In 2010, Finlay MacLeod was presented with the first ever annual Donald Meek Literary Award, at a ceremony at the Edinburgh International Book Festival for his Ùr-Sgeul title, Gormshuil an Righ, his first ever Gaelic novel for adults.

Books

Talking Books

Other publications

External links

Notes

  1. ^ Dwelly, Edward (1994)[1901] The Illustrated Gaelic-English Dictionary. Glasgow: Gairm.
  2. ^ Storey, John (2007) "Ùr-Sgeul: Ag Ùrachadh Litreachas is Cultar na Gàidhlig . . . Dè an Ath Cheum?" Edinburgh University Seminars on Research on Language Policy and Language Planning.
  3. ^ Wringe, Mark (2006) “Normalising the Gaelic Novel - an interim review of the success of the Ùr-Sgeul initiative” Forum for the Languages of Scotland and Ulster
  4. ^ MacNeil, Kevin (November 2011). "Review: An Introduction to Gaelic Fiction". The Bottle Imp (10). http://www.arts.gla.ac.uk/ScotLit/ASLS/SWE/TBI/TBIIssue10/MacNeil.pdf. Retrieved 9 November 2011. 
  5. ^ "An Oidhche Mus Do Sheòl Sinn" The List (1/1/2005)
  6. ^ Gaelic punk by way of Seattle; Skye band Na Gathan set for boundary-breaking gig. The Highland News (13-12-08)
  7. ^ Storey, John (2009) "Ùr-Sgeul: ceistean agus cothrom ‘Chunnaic mi lainnir a’ bhùirn ud’ A Conference on Scottish Gaelic Literature in the Twentieth Century and Beyond, Celtic and Scottish Studies, University of Edinburgh 25 April 2009 - http://www.ur-sgeul.com/rosg-2009.pdf