Eithne Strong Explained

Eithne Strong
Pseudonym:Eithne Strong
Birth Date:1923
Birth Place:Limerick, Ireland
Death Date:1999
Death Place:Monkstown, County Dublin
Occupation:Poet, writer
Nationality:Irish

Eithne Strong (née O'Connell; 1923–1999)[1] was a bilingual Irish poet and writer who wrote in both Irish and English. Her first poems in Irish were published in Combhar and An Glor 1943–44 under the name Eithne Ni Chonaill. She was a founder member of the Runa Press whose early Chapbooks featured artwork by among others Jack B. Yeats, Sean Keating, Sean O'Sullivan, Harry Kernoff among others. The press was noted for the publication in 1943 of Marrowbone Lane by Robert Collis which depicts the fierce fighting that took place during the Easter Rising of 1916.

Life and work

Strong was born in Glensharrold, County Limerick to school teachers, John and Kathleen (Lennon) O'Connell. She went to the Irish speaking school Coláiste Muire, Ennis. Strong moved to Dublin but was not able to afford college at the time. She worked in the Civil Service for a year.[2]

She met her husband while in Dublin. Psychoanalyst Rupert Strong was twelve years her senior and though against the wishes of her family she stayed there and married him on 12 November 1943.[3] They had nine children the last of whom required full-time care due to a mental handicap.[4]

She went to Trinity College, Dublin in her forties where she got a B.A in 1973. She was encouraged and admired in her poetry by Robert Graves, Bertrand Russell, Brendan Kennelly, Padraic Colum, Hilton Edwards, Bernard Share, John B. Keane and Kevin Casey . She participated in publishing, freelance journalism, teaching, work with the media. She taught creative writing and represented Irish writing in Europe: Denmark, France, Germany, Finland, England, the US and Canada. Her poetry and short stories have been published widely in magazines, literary pages and anthologies in Ireland and overseas including North America: Canadian Journal of Irish Studies, North Dakota Quarterly, Midland Review, The Thinker Review. In Spring 1994, she read in New York City before the American Conference for Irish Studies and to members of Conradh na Gaeilge in Washington. Her books include five of poetry in Irish.[5]

Author and poet Mary O'Donnell in her foreword-essay[6] to Strong's poems suggested that "diversity of thought and impulse makes these poems radiate humanity, belief and a revelatory sense of justice." The editor of Poethead Wordpress, Christine Elizabeth Murray has linked the poetry of Patrick Kavanagh, Padraic Colum and Eithne Strong,[7] describing their work "as an example of the triumph of art and literature providing an amazing root-system for new writers in terms of earthly estate, land and language".

In 1991 she won the Kilkenny Design Award for Flesh – The Greatest Sin. She was a member of Aosdána. She died in Monkstown, Dublin in 1999.[8] [9]

The Dún Laoghaire Annual Book Festival,'Mountains to the Sea' awards the Rupert & Eithne Strong Poetry Prize now the Strong/Shine Award made possible by the generous support of Shine, the national organisation dedicated to the needs of those affected by mental ill health.[10] On International Women's Day 2000, an event was held to commemorate the life and work of Eithne Strong at the Irish Writer's Centre, Parnell Square, Dublin and a room was named in her honour in 2012. Her manuscripts are stored un-cataloged at the National Library of Ireland.[11]

Bibliography

Poetry in Irish

Poetry in English

Fiction

Other writings

Translation

Criticism

Further reading

External links

FILM

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Contemporary Authors Online. 2002. Biography in Context. Gale. 26 February 2016.
  2. Strong, Eithne in The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature
  3. Book: Women Creating Women: Contemporary Irish Women Poets. Patricia Boyle Haberstroh. Syracuse University Press. 1996. 250. 0815603576.
  4. News: Eithne Strong Poet and Novelist dies ages 76. .
  5. Web site: Biography and bibliography.
  6. Strong, Eithne (1993). Spatial Nosing: New and Selected Poems. British Library: Salmon. 'O Magnificent Why!', Essay Foreword by Mary O'Donnell.
  7. Murray, Christine Elizabeth (March 2011). "'No Earthly Estate': the Poetry of Patrick Kavanagh, Padraic Colum and Eithne Strong". Poethead.
  8. Web site: Munster lit.
  9. Web site: Aosdána.
  10. Web site: Irish Writers Online.
  11. Ní Dhuibhne . Éilís . 2012 . Poetry in the Archive: Reflections of a Former Archivist on the Manuscripts of Twentieth-century Irish Poets in the National Library of Ireland . Irish University Review . 42 . 1 . 155–168 . 10.3366/iur.2012.0014 . 24577105 . 0021-1427.