Eoghan Ó Tuairisc

Eoghan Ó Tuairisc (English: Eugene Rutterford Watters) (April 3, 191924 August 1982) was an Irish poet and writer.

Life

He was a native of Ballinasloe, County Galway and was educated at Garbally College. His entered St. Patrick’s Teacher Training College, Drumcondra in 1939, graduating with a Diploma in Education in 1945. He was awarded an M.A., by University College Dublin in 1947.

Ó Tuairisc held a commission in the Irish Army during the Emergency from 1939 to 1945. He was a teacher in Finglas, Co. Dublin from 1940 to 1969. From 1962 to 1965, he was editor of Feasta, the journal of Conradh na Gaeilge. His first wife, the Irish artist Una McDonell, died in 1965. The following fived years were an unsettled period of limited productivity, changing residence and jobs, and, ultimately, serious depression.[1]

In 1972 he married the writer Rita Kelly, also of Ballinasloe. They lived in the lock house at the Maganey Lock on the Barrow River that Ó Tuairisc had bought near Carlow town. The plaque on the wall erected by his wife states "He was happy here. Lux Aeterna".[2] Kelly survived him on his death in 1982.[3]

Writing

He wrote novels, verse, drama and criticism in both Irish and English. His first major publication was his controversial novel Murder in Three Moves, followed by Irish-language prose epic L'Attaque, which won an Irish Book Club award. Both works had a strong poetic flavour. His next book was a volume of verse entitled Week-End.

His narrative poem Dermot and Grace, an Irish version of Venus and Adonis, is considered his finest work.

Ó Tuairisc produced little during the five years following O'Donell's death. In 1981 he published The road to Brightcity: and other stories (Swords: Poolbeg Press, 1981), a translation of nine of the best short stories written originally in Irish by Máirtín Ó Cadhain. Also in 1981, he and Rita Kelly published a joint collection of their poems, Dialann sa Díseart.[4]

Like Diarmaid Ó Súilleabháin, he "challenged the critical orthodoxy by openly proclaiming that their standards could not be those of the Gaeltacht and by demanding a creative freedom that would acknowledge hybridity and reject the strictures of the linguistic purists."[5]

Eoghan Ó Tuairisc was an inaugural member of Aosdána, when it was founded in 1981, and the first of its members to die.[6] He was a recipient of an Arts Council of Ireland prize, as well as an Abbey Theatre prize for a Christmas pantomime in Irish. A bibliography of Ó Tuairisc's work, together with biographical information, was published in Irish in 1988.[7]

Works

Translations

Poetry

Plays

Essays

Books

Other activities

References

  1. Welch, Robert, ed. Entry on Eoghan Ó Tuairisc in The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1996, p. 461.
  2. Peadar Ó Gríofa personal visit by boat September 2013
  3. Ó Cearnaigh, Seán. Entry on Rita E. Kelly in Scribhneoiri na Gaeilge, 1945-1995. Comhar Teo., Dublin, 1995, p. 64.
  4. Oxford Companion to Irish Literature, pp. 461-62.
  5. Field Day Review 4, 2008. Field Day Publications. 2005. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-946755-38-7.
  6. Brady, Anne M. and Brian Cleeve. Entry on Eoghan Ó Tuairisc in A Biographical Dictionary of Irish Writers. Lilliput Press, Mullingar, Ireland, 1985, pp. 374-75.
  7. Nic Eoin, Máire. Eoghan Ó Tuairisc: beatha agus saothar. An Clóchomhar, Dublin, 1988. See also Ó Cearnaigh, entry on Eoghan Ó Tuairisc in Scribhneoiri na Gaeilge, 1945-1995, pp. 230-31.

External References

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