edited by Colm Tóibín
Contributors
Sebastian Barry, Marina Carr, Anthony Cronin, Roddy Doyle,
Anne Enright, Hugo Hamilton, Joseph O ’Connor, Mary O ’Malley,
Fintan O ’Toole, Colm Tóibín, Vincent WoodsLast year when Garry
Hynes asked me to edit a book on Synge, I realised that a
great seachange had taken place in relation to his work. Once, he
would have been viewed by many readers and writers as an
old-fashioned figure whose influence was harmful, whose
stage-Irishness was not to be taken seriously. Now, he has become a
fascinating and ambiguous genius, whose language is rich with wit
and nuance and unpredictability. He worked, as Yeats said, with a
living speech, and the way he worked, his ingenuity, his style, has
come to mean a lot to contemporary writers. The gap between his own
shyness, his quietness and the noise his characters make is a great
example of the gap between the being who suffers and the mind which
creates. Although he was mild-mannered, he had no respect for
current pieties, and he made this part of the fierce and
uncompromising energy of his
plays. Also, his book on the Aran Islands, so careful, watchful,
respectful, is understood by all of us to be a masterpiece. Thus it
was not hard to approach writers to contribute a piece on
Synge, to help produce a book as varied and unpredictable as Synge
’s own work. The brief was open – use any form, any length, to pay
homage to Synge, or argue with him, or conjure up the writer who has
become our contemporary. It meant a lot that we were doing this for
the Druid Synge Season – when all six major plays will be presented
in repertory for the first time – because the Druid Synge
productions over the past quarter century have, more than anything
else, been responsible for our fresh understanding of Synge’s
genius.
Colm Tóibín
€18 ISBN 1-904505-14-7
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