Javascript must be enabled to continue!
‘One does not take sides in these neutral latitudes': Myles na gCopaleen and The Emergency
View through CrossRef
The years of the Second World War (1939-1945), a period known as The Emergency in Ireland, were pivotal for the development of the nation. Immediately after the outburst of the war in the continent, the Fianna Fáil cabinet led by Éamon de Valera declared the state of emergency and adopted a neutrality policy. To ensure this, the government imposed strict censorship control, especially on journalism and the media. The aim of the censorship system was to ensure that war facts were presented as neutrally as possible to avoid any potential retaliation from any of the belligerents. This censorship apparatus, however, affected many intellectuals of the time who felt that their freedom of expression had been restrained even more. One of these dissenting writers was Brian O’Nolan (1911-1966), better known as Flann O’Brien or Myles na gCopaleen. For more than twenty-six years (1940-1966), he wrote a comic and satirical column in The Irish Times entitled Cruiskeen Lawn. In his column, O’Brien commented on varied problems affecting Dublin and Ireland as a whole. One of the many topics he began discussing was precisely Ireland’s neutral position in the war. Therefore, this paper aims at examining Ireland’s neutral position in the war as seen through a selection of columns from Cruiskeen Lawn, devoting special attention to the oppression of censorship and the distracting measures developed by de Valera’s government.
Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Murcia
Title: ‘One does not take sides in these neutral latitudes': Myles na gCopaleen and The Emergency
Description:
The years of the Second World War (1939-1945), a period known as The Emergency in Ireland, were pivotal for the development of the nation.
Immediately after the outburst of the war in the continent, the Fianna Fáil cabinet led by Éamon de Valera declared the state of emergency and adopted a neutrality policy.
To ensure this, the government imposed strict censorship control, especially on journalism and the media.
The aim of the censorship system was to ensure that war facts were presented as neutrally as possible to avoid any potential retaliation from any of the belligerents.
This censorship apparatus, however, affected many intellectuals of the time who felt that their freedom of expression had been restrained even more.
One of these dissenting writers was Brian O’Nolan (1911-1966), better known as Flann O’Brien or Myles na gCopaleen.
For more than twenty-six years (1940-1966), he wrote a comic and satirical column in The Irish Times entitled Cruiskeen Lawn.
In his column, O’Brien commented on varied problems affecting Dublin and Ireland as a whole.
One of the many topics he began discussing was precisely Ireland’s neutral position in the war.
Therefore, this paper aims at examining Ireland’s neutral position in the war as seen through a selection of columns from Cruiskeen Lawn, devoting special attention to the oppression of censorship and the distracting measures developed by de Valera’s government.
Related Results
Lost In Translation
Lost In Translation
Abstract
Languages are cultural epiphenomena: they, and their varieties, emerge at stages of development in the life of a culture. In some important respects they are peculiar t...
Observations of sound-speed fluctuations in the Beaufort Sea from summer 2016 to summer 2017
Observations of sound-speed fluctuations in the Beaufort Sea from summer 2016 to summer 2017
Due to seasonal ice cover, acoustics can provide a unique means for Arctic undersea communication, navigation, and remote sensing. This study seeks to quantify the annual cycle of ...
From storms to planetary-scale disturbances in the atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn
From storms to planetary-scale disturbances in the atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn
<p>The deep atmospheres of the giant planets Jupiter and Saturn are covered by different layers of clouds and hazes where a rich variety of dynamical phenomena take p...
Noordnederlandse majolica: kast opruimen
Noordnederlandse majolica: kast opruimen
AbstractThis article has been prompted by two recent works on the subject, the new and greatly expanded version published in 1981 of Nederlandse majolica by Dingeman Korf, a pionee...
Bio-Medical waste Management: A Review
Bio-Medical waste Management: A Review
Biomedical waste produced by emergency clinics and other medical services settings is being overseen inadequately. Often it get blended in with metropolitan strong waste and discar...
The Intelligence of Fools: Reading the US Military Archive of the Korean War
The Intelligence of Fools: Reading the US Military Archive of the Korean War
This article examines the struggle over sovereignty on the Korean peninsula from the US occupation through the Korean War not over the usual stakes of geopolitical territory but, r...
Musical strategies to improve children’s memory in an educational context
Musical strategies to improve children’s memory in an educational context
Music-based interventions and music lessons modulate cognitive functions, such as language or attention. However, the specific and differential effects of musical activities are a ...