Patrick MacGill: Traducción al español de una selección de sus poemas y semblanza crítica
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24162/EI2021-10068Palabras clave:
Patrick MacGill, Primera Guerra Mundial, Donegal, Canon Dalton, navvy, traducciónResumen
Patrick MacGill participó en la Primera Guerra Mundial como fusilero del regimiento London Irish Rifles, aunque una vez en el conflicto, trabajó como camillero. En el campo de batalla escribió sus novelas de guerra y su libro de poesías, Soldier Songs, donde se incluyen los poemas “The Cross”, “I Will Go Back” y “The Trench”, cuyas traducciones por primera vez al español se presentan en este artículo. El lector también podrá encontrar una semblanza crítica, haciendo un recorrido por la obra y vida de MacGill desde su nacimiento en Glenties hasta su muerte en Estados Unidos y analizando cómo toda su producción literaria está relacionada con sus vivencias y con determinadas decisiones tomadas, que influirán tanto en sus éxitos como en sus fracasos.
Citas
“A Talk with Patrick MacGill. Irish Poet on The Need for Brotherhood”. The Methodist Times. 17 February 1927.
“Calvacade: The Picture of A Generation”. The Glen Innes Examiner. 1 April 1933, 4.
Cuseo, Lucy. “Family Memories”. Open House 230 (2013): 7.
Dudley Edwards, Owen. “Patrick MacGill and the Making of a Historical Source: with a Handlist of His Works.” The Innes Review 37. 2 (1986): 73-100.
Greacen, Robert. Patrick MacGill: Champion of The Underdog. Glenties: Glenties Development Association, 1981.
“London Theatrical: A Play by Patrick MacGill”. The Scotsman. 8 February 1921, 5.
MacGill, Patrick. Black Bonar. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1928.
_______. Children of the Dead End. 1914. London: Caliban Books, 1985.
_______. Fear. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1921.
_______. Gleanings from a Navvy’s Scrapbook. Greenock: P. MacGill, 1910.
_______. Glenmornan. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1918.
_______. Helen Spenser. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1937.
_______. Lanty Hanlon: a Comedy of Irish life. 1922. Dingle: Brandon, 1983.
_______. Maureen. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1919.
_______. Moleskin Joe. 1923. Edinburgh: Birlinn, 2000.
_______. Sid Puddiefoot. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1926.
_______. Soldier Songs. 1916. London: Caliban Books, 1984.
_______. Songs of a Navvy. Windsor: P. MacGill, 1912.
_______. Songs of Donegal. 1921. London: Caliban Books, 1984.
_______. Songs of the Dead End. 1913. London: Caliban Books, 1984.
_______. Suspense. A Play in Three Acts. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1930.
_______. The Amateur Army. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1915.
_______. The Brown Brethren. New York: George H. Doran, 1917.
_______. The Carpenter of Orra. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1924.
_______. The Diggers: The Australians in France. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1919.
_______. The Dough-Boys. New York: George H. Doran, 1919.
_______. The Glen of Carra. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1934.
_______. The Great Push. 1916. Edinburgh: Birlinn, 2000.
_______. The Rat-Pit. 1915. Edinburgh: Birlinn, 1999.
_______. The Red Horizon. Dingle: Brandon, 1984.
_______. The House at the World’s End. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1935.
_______. Tulliver’s Mill. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1934.
_______. Letter to Canon Dalton. 24 November 1911. Oxford University: Worcester College Library.
_______. Letter to Canon Dalton. 18 January 1912. Oxford University: Worcester College Library.
_______. Letter to Herbert Jenkins. 27 February 1919. Berg Collection, New York Public Library
_______. Letter to Canon Dalton. 30 April 1919. Oxford University: Worcester College Library.
_______. Letter to Herbert Jenkins. 5 November 1920. Berg Collection, New York Public Library
“MacGill, Patrick. The Navvy Poet at Windsor: Interview with Mr. Patrick MacGill”. Daily Express. 19 February 1913.
O’Sullivan, Patrick. “Patrick MacGill: The Making of A Writer”. Ireland Histories: Aspects of State, Society and Ideology. Ed. S. Hutton and P. Stewart. London and New York: Routledge, 1991. 203-222.
Phillips, Terry. “The Wisdom of Experience: Patrick MacGill’s Irishness Reassessed”. Sub-Versions, Transnational Readings of Modern Irish Literature. Ed. Ciaran Ross. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi, 2010. 29-52.
Pulido Palomo, José Manuel. “Patrick MacGill: estudio comparativo de Children of the Dead End, The Rat-Pit, Glenmornan y Moleskin Joe”. Tesis doctoral. Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 2009. Eprints.ucm. Web.18 Dic 2009.
Sherrie, Joe. “The Voice of the Inarticulate”. Irish Press. 28 July 1971.
Starr, Robert. Nailed to The Rolls of Honour, Crucified: Irish Literary Responses to the Great War: The War Writings of Patrick MacGill, James Hanley, and Liam O’Flaherty. Diss. University of Warwick, 2017. Stuttgart, Germany: ibidem-Verlag, Jessica Haunschild u Christian Schon, 2019.
“Still MacGill”. The Sunday Times. 20 January 1918, 13.
Wearing, John Peter. A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. 2nd ed. Lanham, MD, United States: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 2014.
_______. The London Stage: 1930-1939. A Calendar of Productions Performer and Personnel. Lanham, MD, United States: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 2014.
“Suspense”. Variety. 23 July 1930, 31.
Publicado
Cómo citar
Número
Sección
Licencia
Derechos de autor 2021 José Manuel Pulido

Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial 4.0.