"Irish language" Essays and Research Papers

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    RAÚL MUÑOZ RODRÍGUEZ CORREO - E: irokuoiraul@yahoo.es rmunoz62@alumno.uned.es COMMENTARY TEXT Proclamation of the Irish Republic‚ 24 April 1916 “Proclamation of the Irish Republic” was one of the more important aspects in the Easter Rising. It´s a historic – circumstantial text. In order to maintain secrecy the Proclamation of the Irish Republic was printed out on a hand press a few hours before the Rising. It was produced in two sections and due to the shortage of lettering‚ the

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    Who's Irish By Gish Jen

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    By Sandy English 19 January 2000 Who’s Irish? ‚ by Gish Jen‚ Alfred A. Knopf‚ New York‚ 1999‚ 208 pp.‚ $22.00 Gish Jen has published two well-received novels‚ Typical American (1992) and Mona in the Promised Land (1997)‚ both of which deal with the entry of Chinese immigrants or their families into American life. Who’s Irish? is her first book of short stories. It deals with much the same material‚ and the quality of the eight stories is uneven; two are quite satisfying‚ the rest less so. “Birthmates”

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    IRELAND DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE The declaration of independence was a document in which Dail Eireann‚ the Revolutionary Parliament‚ proclaimed the Irish Republic. Through the declaration of independence‚ the intention of Dail was to confirm a clamation voice in the earlier "Easter Proclamation". In 1916 a document was read by Padraig Pearse (leader of a republican movement) in Ireland at Easter Rising. This document supposed to be a declaration of a "provisional government"

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    famine hit Ireland that forced many Irish to leave their homes and emigrate to America in hopes of rebuilding their lives and rising out of their impoverished and starving state. Many Irish emigrated to the eastern part of the United States‚ specifically to New York. The Irish immigrants did not have an easy life in New York because of anti - Irish sentiment and their inability to assimilate into American culture. The most common place in New York where the Irish lived was an area in the Sixth Ward

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    The conflict between English imperial control and Irish nationalism began long ago. It started taking place as far back as the 12th century when Henry II‚ with the Pope’s approval‚ declared himself ruler of Ireland. For many centuries after this occurrence England’s control of Ireland was very limited‚ even though it didn’t have any real unified opposition. Much of this‚ however‚ began to change as early as the 17th century. Many things involving this conflict took place in the 17th and 18th

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    SEAMUS HEANEY AS A IRISH NATIONALIST Heaney is widely considered Ireland’s most accomplished contemporary poet and has often been called the greatest Irish poet since William Butler Yeats. In his works‚ Heaney often focuses on the proper roles and responsibilities of a poet in society‚ exploring themes of self-discovery and spiritual growth as well as addressing political and cultural issues related to Irish history. His poetry is characterized by sensuous language‚ sexual metaphors‚ and nature

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    The Irish are a remarkable people. By that‚ I mean other people often make remarks about them. Remarks such as "Hey‚ that’s my bicycle!"‚ or "That’s the one‚ officer. He did it." But of course I’m joking. The Irish have many extraordinary talents. They are unsurpassed in the arts of literature and story-telling‚ and when they sing they will make you cry for losses you don’t understand but which need no understanding to be real. They are master brewers and distillers. They can wipe the morning dew

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    Hao Vu/ Matthew Cunningham ENG 3320 Moosally An Analysis of the Irish English Dialect The official language of Ireland is known as Gaelic to the world and Eire‚ or Irish‚ to the people who live there. Nevertheless it is a language that isn’t spoken in the everyday lives of most Irish citizens and is on the state sanctioned life-support of school curriculum and official decree. Our discussion is on the Irish English dialect commonly spoken by the roughly five million inhabitants of the Republic

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    The Irish War of Independence Not all revolutions are won all of the time. Most would say that freedom is something worth fighting for. Thomas Jefferson once said “Occasionally the tree of Liberty must be watered with the blood of Patriots and Tyrants”. Freedom is an inalienable right all people are born with. Some who have had their freedom snatched away by the hands of some foreign country‚ try to fight to get it back. That is exactly what Ireland did in the early 1900s. For both the Irish and

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    Irish Hunger Strikes

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    creating the social movement. Both the Irish hunger strikes and protests over sovereignty for Quebec were directed and catalyzed by such social forces. The hunger strikes that culminated a 5 year protest by Republican prisoners was‚ as the political nature of the prisoners would have us assume‚ fuelled by clashing political ideologies and threatened national identities. The Quebec protest‚ although perhaps similar in concept‚ was distinct in many forms from the Irish struggle. Quebec saw a widely reported

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