Bibliography

Fionntán
de Brún

4 publications between 2006 and 2020 indexed
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Works edited

Ó Corráin, Ailbhe, Fionntán de Brún, and Maxim Fomin (eds), Scotha cennderca cen on: a Festschrift for Séamus Mac Mathúna, Studia Celtica Upsaliensia, 10, Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 2020.  
abstract:
This volume comprises a celebratory collection of articles presented to Séamus Mac Mathúna on the occasion of his 75th birthday and launched at the 17th International Symposium of Societas Celtologica Nordica held in Uppsala on 7–10 May 2020. The volume brings together papers contributed by Séamus' friends and colleagues in the broad areas of Literature, Language, Folklore and the History of Celtic Studies and includes an introductory appreciation of his contribution to the discipline. Literary papers deal with the hero and antihero in Indo-European literatures, Irish heroic literature, Irish voyage literature, Irish bardic poetry, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Irish poetry and twentieth-century Irish literature. The Language section includes articles on Ogham inscriptions, Irish and Scottish dialectology, Irish place names and lexical compounds in Welsh. Papers in Folklore and the History of Celtic Studies deal with folktales, the question of native legend and borrowing, the translation of Irish material into Armenian, the collection of folklore in Co. Tyrone, Irish manuscripts in North America, lexicography in nineteenth-century Belfast, and connections between Gaelic and Arabic in the development of Celtic Studies as a discipline. The volume concludes with a comprehensive list of the publications of Séamus Mac Mathúna.
abstract:
This volume comprises a celebratory collection of articles presented to Séamus Mac Mathúna on the occasion of his 75th birthday and launched at the 17th International Symposium of Societas Celtologica Nordica held in Uppsala on 7–10 May 2020. The volume brings together papers contributed by Séamus' friends and colleagues in the broad areas of Literature, Language, Folklore and the History of Celtic Studies and includes an introductory appreciation of his contribution to the discipline. Literary papers deal with the hero and antihero in Indo-European literatures, Irish heroic literature, Irish voyage literature, Irish bardic poetry, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Irish poetry and twentieth-century Irish literature. The Language section includes articles on Ogham inscriptions, Irish and Scottish dialectology, Irish place names and lexical compounds in Welsh. Papers in Folklore and the History of Celtic Studies deal with folktales, the question of native legend and borrowing, the translation of Irish material into Armenian, the collection of folklore in Co. Tyrone, Irish manuscripts in North America, lexicography in nineteenth-century Belfast, and connections between Gaelic and Arabic in the development of Celtic Studies as a discipline. The volume concludes with a comprehensive list of the publications of Séamus Mac Mathúna.
de Brún, Fionntán (ed.), Belfast and the Irish language, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2006.

Contributions to edited collections or authored works

de Brún, Fionntán, “Roibeard Mac Ádhaimh, Aodh Mac Domhnaill agus an réimse poiblí”, in: Liam Mac Mathúna, and Regina Uí Chollatáin (eds), Saothrú na Gaeilge scríofa i suímh uirbeacha, 1700–1850 = Cultivating written Irish in Ireland's urban areas, 1700–1850, 2, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2016. 96–113.
de Brún, Fionntán, “The Fadgies: an ‘Irish-speaking colony’ in nineteenth-century Belfast”, in: Fionntán de Brún (ed.), Belfast and the Irish language, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2006. 101–113.