Article Title
Crossing Boundaries and Early Gleanings of Cultural Replacement in Irish Periodical Culture
Abstract
The first Irish language periodical, Bolg an tSolair, was published in Belfast in 1795 although journalism in a modern context through the medium of Irish did not begin to flourish until the early years of the twentieth century. The ‘Gaelic column’ in English newspapers; Philip Barron’s Waterford-based Ancient Ireland – A Weekly Magazine (1835); Richard Dalton’s Tipperary journal Fíor-Éirionnach (1862); alongside some occasional periodicals with material relating to the Irish language, ensured that the Irish language featured as an element of a modern journalistic print culture (Nic Pháidín, 1987: 71-2).
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Recommended Citation
Uí Chollatáin, Regina
(2010)
"Crossing Boundaries and Early Gleanings of Cultural Replacement in Irish Periodical Culture,"
Irish Communication Review:
Vol. 12:
Iss.
1, Article 4.
doi:10.21427/D7ZM7R
Available at:
https://arrow.tudublin.ie/icr/vol12/iss1/4
DOI
10.21427/D7ZM7R