Irish literary renaissance: Difference between revisions

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==Writers associated with the Irish literary renaissance==
==Writers associated with the Irish literary renaissance==
 
*Sir Samuel Ferguson 1810—1886
*[[Sean O'Casey]]
*Douglas Hyde 1860—1949
*[[William Butler Yeats]]
*[[William Butler Yeats]] 1865—1939
*[[George Russell]]
*[[James Stephens (author)|James Stephens]]
*[[Ella Young]]
*[[Ella Young]]
*[[John Miliington Synge]]
*Ethna Carbery 1866—1902
*[[Padraic Colum]]
*Alice Milligan 1866—1953
*[[Maud Gonne]]
*Dora Shorter (née Sigerson) 1866—1918
*[[George Russell]](Æ) 1867—1935
*[[John Millington Synge]] 1871—1909
*Nora Chesson (née Hopper) 1871—1906
*[[Sean O'Casey]] 1880—1964
*[[Padraic Colum]] 1881—1972
*[[James Stephens (author)|James Stephens]] 1882—1950

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The Irish literary renaissance is the general term for a series of revivals of interest in poetry, drama, and fiction in English which was produced by writers from Ireland in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In a more detailed sense, it can be seen as starting with the Celtic revival, a period of renewed interest in traditional Irish myths and folklore starting in the 1880's, moving through a middle phase centered around William Butler Yeats and the Abbey Theatre, and finally through a later, explicitly modernist phase, of which James Joyce was the signal writer.

Writers associated with the Irish literary renaissance