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Mícheál Ó hAodha
Irish poet and nonfiction writer (born 1969) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mícheál Ó hAodha (born 1969)[1] is an Irish poet and nonfiction writer. He also works in the departments of history and comparative literature at the University of Limerick, where he is a part-time lecturer.[2]
Works
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Ó hAodha's poems have been collected in the books
- Dúchas Dóchasach ["Survivor": Representations of the New Irish] (as Michael Hayes, illustrated by Jean Hakizimana, Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2007)[3]
- Slán le hÉireann [A Farewell to Ireland: Migrant Poems] (Coiscéim, 2012)[4]
- Leabhar Dubh an tSneachta [The Black Book of Snow] (2015)
- Leabhar na nAistear [The Book of Journeys] (Coiscéim, 2017)
- Leabhar na nAistear II (Coiscéim, 2019)
He is also the author of:
- Canting with Cauley: a Glossary of Travellers' Cant/Gammon (with William Cauley, A. & A. Farmar, 2006)[5]
- Parley with me: a Compendium of Fairground Speech (A. & A. Farmar, 2006)[5]
- Irish Travellers: Representations and Realities (as Michael Hayes, Liffey Press, 2007)[6]
- Postcolonial Artist: Johnny Doran and Irish Traveller Tradition (with David Duohy, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2008)
- "Insubordinate Irish": Travellers in the Text (Manchester University Press, 2011)[7]
He has a particular interest in minority groups including Irish Travellers and the Irish-speaking minority of the west of Ireland and has written many books in collaboration with Travellers, Roma, fairground/circus people and others. He has also written on the experiences of Irish emigrants, and the Irish experience in Britain.[citation needed]
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