Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for April, 2011

An honest and natural slum dialect is more tolerable than the attempt of a phonetically untaught person to imitate the vulgar dialect of the golf club; and I am sorry to say that in spite of the efforts of our Academy of Dramatic Art, there is still too much sham golfing English on our stage, and too little of the noble English of Forbes Robertson.

George Bernard Shaw writing in the preface to Pygmalion.

It is pretty remarkable that is has taken 100 years for Pygmalion to make its way to The Abbey. After such a long wait, it’s about time Eliza Doolittle made her way to the stage.

My introduction to Shaw was, unusually enough,John Bull’s Other Island. His satires and humour greatly appealed to me, and I’ve read a great deal of his works, letters and social commentary. Class, of course, is a reoccurring theme in Shaw’s work. Shaw laid down many of his thoughts on the structures of capitalist society in writings collected for The Intelligent Woman’s Guide to Socialism. Women’s independence, as much as class struggle, was something which greatly interested Shaw.

It is useless to pretend that religion and tradition and honor always win the day. It is now a century and a half since the poet Oliver Goldsmith warned us that ‘Honor sinks where commerce long prevails’; and the economic pressure by which Capitalism tempts women grew fiercer after his time. We have just seen how in the case of the parents sending their children out to work in their infancy to add a little to the family income, they found that their wages fell until what they and the children between them could earn was no more than they had been able to earn by themselves before, so that in order to live they now had to send their children to work whether they liked it or not.

Of course while Pygmalion triumphs as romantic comedy, Shaw’s play takes aim at the British class system and the role of women in the society of the time.

It is perhaps Shaw’s most celebrated work. After 100 years, it’s great to see it arrive at The Abbey, which has delivered such excellent works in recent times. I look forward to attending.

On the Abbey stage Wednesday 27 April – Saturday 11 June
Previews
Wednesday 27 April – Tuesday 3 May
No performance Monday 2 May

Monday – Saturday evening 7.30pm, Saturday matinee 2pm
Tickets: €13 – €40

Read Full Post »

There is a good report of the protest on Kildare Street today following events in Mayo over here, on the website of the WSM.

The message of todays event, which was organised by an ad hoc group of organisations and individuals concerned with justice, equality, and women’s and human rights under the heading ‘Say no to the trivialisation of rape’, was that rape is not a joke.

Organiser Susan Ms McKay from the National Women’s Council said: “Jokes about rape are never funny. Rape is recognised in law as being second only to murder in terms of gravity. An Garda Síochána are responsible for upholding the law and for protecting the public. Their behaviour must be exemplary, and they must respect the people they serve. That includes women. We are half the population, and we are the majority of the population at risk when it comes to crimes of sexual violence.”

Read Full Post »

A couple of nice snaps of The Bleeding Horse public house on Camden Street.

The pub, which dates back to 1649, claims to be the second oldest pub in Dublin.

There are many stories on how the tavern got its name. The most frequent one told is that during The Battle of Rathmines (1649), Cromwellian forces brought their wounded horses to the thatched, timber inn that stood here.

From the early 1970s to the early 1990s, it was called The Falcon Inn.

Charlotte Street, to the left of The Bleeding Horse, was demolished in 1992. I plan to write an article on this disappeared  street in the near future.

The Bleeding Horse (1950s)

The Falcon Inn (1972) Credit - Hohenloh

The Falcoln Inn (1972) Credit - Dublin City Council

The Falcon Inn (1990) Credit - Dublin City Council

The Bleeding Horse (2010) Credit - nycbrent

Read Full Post »

While a certain Myles na Gopaleen joked of ‘no God and two Saint Patrick’s’, the brother once heard otherwise:

“The brother met an oul fella below in Wikela town and yer man said straight out of that there was no Saint Patrick and that the whole yarn was invented be Strongbow or somebody. The brother asked him, if that was true, how come there was no snakes in Ireland? Know what th’oul fella done? Laughed in the brother’s face.”

We take any chance to post Myles here of course.

Anyway, here is a video of the latest History Ireland Hedge School, at the National Library on Kildare Street. I didn’t make this one with work commitments, but I was at the prior Hedge School which dealt with ‘1916 and all that’ and what the decade of centenaries ahead of us means. The National Library is a great venue for discussions like the Hedge School’s.

The panel for this one were: Elva Johnston (UCD), Canon Adrian Empey (Church of Ireland Theological College), Mike Cronin (Boston College) and Eamon Delaney (Sunday Independent). Some of you would have caught Delaney at the Hedge School we were involved with in Phibsborough, which examined the punk and new wave scene of 1970’s and 80’s Dublin. Tommy Graham, editor of the magazine, oversaw the discussion.

From a discussion on neutrality in a Laois tent to the more comfortable National Library, the Hedge Schools are a great attempt to bring historical debate into more popular and common settings than is the norm.

Read Full Post »

A quick repost here, I saw this featured on the website of Liberty, the newspaper of the Siptu union.

Notice of Public Protest Say no to the trivialisation of rape!

Protect the rights of women and migrants to protest with dignity and respect!

PROTEST AGAINST RAPE COMMENTS BY GARDAI

Dáil Éireann – Friday, 8th April at 1pm

If like many people in Ireland you were shocked by the recordings of Gardaí in Mayo making disparaging and threatening comments about two women protesters – including the threat of rape and deportation – come join a silent protest this Friday 8th April at 1pm at Dáil Eireann.

The gathering will:

Stand in solidarity with the women concerned
Support the right of women everywhere to protest without fear of rape or violence
Demand an end to the trivialisation of rape
Support the right of migrants to protest without the threat of intimidation or deportation
Voice our solidarity with victims of sexual violence
Call for a promptly delivered, robust and transparent enquiry into the behaviour of the Gardaí concerned
This protest is being organised by an ad hoc group of organisations and individuals concerned with justice, equality, and women’s and human rights.

Read Full Post »

I mentioned on here before than I’m trying to get to grips with Ulysses at the minute. One of the things I’ve been doing too is reading into some of the people who greatly influenced the work, such as Oliver St. John Gogarty. A writer of great renown, Gogarty (or Buck Mulligan to Ulysses readers) was also a Senator in the Free State administration.

I’ve been getting to grips with Buck through Ulick O’Connor’s excellent biography Oliver St.John Gogarty. He strikes me as a remarkably complex character, but one with a great wit. I was struck by a great comment in the Senate around the Wild Birds Protection Bill, 1929.

Click to expand:

My journey through Ulysses, for anyone who is curious, is going well. I expect to be dressed like this by Bloomsday.

Read Full Post »

What is it with me and cameras? I just have no luck with them; this is my fourth camera to give up on me in around eight years. I still hold out hope, I will get my little G9 fixed, I’ve only started to get used to it and have only started taking pictures I’m proud of. This rant I hear you ask, what is it about? Well, its a precursor and an apology for the quality of the below pictures, but I couldn’t help but take them and share them.

Hungover cycles often provide great inspiration, and Sunday’s was no different, and rewarding also, having come across the below piece down the (Luas) tracks. Its probably been around a while, but this is the first time I’ve ventured down this far since before the Chrimbo.

Who listens? (1)

Who Listens? (2)

Back in the day, you were born with
original sin, now its original debt.
Every man, woman and child in this
country are footin’ the bill for a
load of empty buildings. If it was
France, there’d be bleedin’ murder.

Who Listens? (3)

Where’s my Nama? You know what I
mean? I worked on the sites round
here and when I got laid off I
still had to pay me mortgage every
month. But we’re bailing these boys
(out I?) don’t get it.

Who Listens? (4)

The middle to the end of the
sixties saw the dyin’ end of the
docks. It just went slowly down.
If any of the old Dockers came
back today and looked down from
Butt Bridge, they’d call you a liar,
they’d go “that’s not where I worked.”

Who Listens? (5)

There’s something Flann O’Brien-esque about the writing style, god knows what the man would have said if he saw the state of the country now. Either way, its a good summation of what has happened the old docklands; there is or, was a social history there that has been all but completely wiped out in order to pave way for the IFSC, the area that most said at the time  ” is a grand representation of the Celtic Tiger, sure isn’t it great the money we have now for all these shiny buildings.” Its a shocking pity that most of them are now empty.

Read Full Post »

Fantastic picture from August 1923 showing a young man sticking up poster proclaiming that De Valera has been arrested over old election posters asking people to vote for him.

© Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS

Read Full Post »

I was on Barmyflags getting a flag priced last night. I’ve always wanted an ‘Atletico San Patricio’ flag for Inchicore on Friday nights, it sounds a bit exotic for the League of Ireland and indeed the style of football played here!

Low and behold, Atletico San Patricio are a real club:

The other Saint Patrick's Athletic F.C

They play their football in Argentina. Like in Inchicore, they seem to have an ultras grouping behind them, notice the smoke and wavey’s:

Between our shared red and white kits, love of a good ultras performance and the whole matter of a name, maybe there’s a friendship there.

Their average gates seem to be in the low hundreds, I wonder if they’re aware of the Atletico San Patricio who have played from Berlin to Glasgow?

It’s nice to share a name with another football club, not least when they’re named after Saint Patrick despite geographical distance.

Read Full Post »

Something I’ve done some research on lately (more on it later) is the southern response to the bombing of Belfast during the second World War. One of the most remarkable aspects of that response was the decision to send firefighters from the south across the border on two occasions.

This match day programme comes from 1945, and highlights the relationship that existed between the fire services in Dublin and the services in the north of Ireland. No doubt such a relationship was cemented and prospered as a result of shared experiences in war struck Belfast.

I can’t find a result for the game online, using all the various newspaper archives. I’d love to know how it finished. It is an early enough example of such cross-border solidarity.

Read Full Post »

No Bother!

Dublin skinheads, mods, punks and ska heads rejoiced this month to learn the news that No Bother, a new and second hand clothing shop, have set up in the city.

While they look for a permanent premises, No Bother will have a widely stocked stall every Saturday (12 – 5) at the flea market in The Grand Social (old Pravda) on Liffey Street.

A selection of their merchandise.

Read Full Post »

Between 2005 and 2007 I took nearly 450 pictures of street art and graffiti around the Dublin area, primarily in the city centre and the South-Eastern suburbs. At first using a number of throwaway cameras and then an Olympia digital camera. I was hoping to capture a little bit of Dublin graffiti social history with the fanciful idea of putting a book together of all my snaps. I soon lost interest but thought it would be worthwhile to upload the best snaps here so they don’t go to complete waste. Enjoy.

The seventh and final feature in our series on Dublin graffiti is on political tagging.

(c) Jay Carax

(c) Jay Carax

(c) Jay Carax

(c) Jay Carax

(more…)

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »