Fall 2009
Monday, November 2
6:30 PM
Magruder Hall 1000

 
back to FUTURE PRESENTATIONS:
Dr. C. Marie Harker, Associate Professor of English
Seventeenth-century Poetic Crossdressing:  Màiri NicLeod and the Bardic Masculine

In sabbatical-supported research, Dr Harker studied the work of of the 17th-century Scots Gaelic poet Màiri nighean Alasdair Ruaidh (Mary MacLeod, c. 1615 – c. 1705). Notable as a largely self-trained woman in a world dominated by career courtly poets, an exclusively male occupation, Màiri served the aristocratic chiefs of Scotland’s Clan MacLeod.  Not widely known to modern scholarship outside Celtic Studies, her poetic output is noteworthy not only for her unusual personal circumstances but also for her remarkable ability to write in the high-literary style of the exclusively male bards. In this presentation for a non-specialist audience, Dr Harker will examine the subjects of both the collapse of late-medieval/early-modern Celtic culture as illustrated by the last moments of the traditional high literary traditions of the Gaelic Scottish Highlands—and also the role of a woman occupying a traditionally-male dominated place in that traditional society.  The Truman Faculty Forum presentation  will involve brief historic overviews of the status of Gaelic culture at the moment when England was eradicating a politically independent Gaeldom and English was rapidly dominating spheres in which high-culture Gaelic had flourished, as well as a brief introduction to the Gaelic bard tradition.  It will also address the place of women in this traditional society in order to consider the degree to which Màiri’s work was so remarkable.  Some poems will be read in Gaelic and then translated and explicated in English. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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