271:. After the war, Dunphy's role in public life diminished, possibly due to his bitterness at the outcome of the conflict. In 1926, he returned to Paris to live with his cousin Mathieu Dubont, often dining with James and Nora Joyce at Dubont's home. However, Dunphy sound found that Paris had changed and he became disenchanted with the "mindlessly sanguine" avant-garde movements of the period. His literary output significantly declined in this period, with only a handful of short pieces being printed in small magazines during the late 1920s. One of these, 'The Tall Grass' has been marked by several scholars as a low point in Dunphy's career from which he never recovered.
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267:, although he did not take up arms. As a prominent supporter of the anti-treaty cause, he was enlisted as a propagandist. Dunphy wrote polemics, which were distributed in clandestine pamphlets and were often circulated in the international media. He became well-known among French readers as the author of several essays about the conflict, which were published in
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members in the chamber. Upon acceding to the house, Dunphy announced his retirement from literary fiction to concentrate on politics. His political career focused on international concerns; Dunphy was suggested as a possible
Ambassador to France in 1955 but declined owing to "old age". Increasingly
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After several unhappy years in Paris, Dunphy again returned to Dublin in 1931, where he lived with his companion Martin McMurray. Speculation grew about the relationship between the two, but the increasingly ill-tempered Dunphy frequently threatened to take legal action against anyone who discussed
533:{{Persondata | NAME = Ciarán Dunphy | ALTERNATIVE NAMES = | SHORT DESCRIPTION = Irish writer and translator | DATE OF BIRTH = 12 September 1888 | PLACE OF BIRTH = | DATE OF DEATH = 19 December 1963 | PLACE OF DEATH = }} {{DEFAULTSORT:Ciaran Dunphy}} ] ] ] ] ] ] ] ] ]
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using the allegory of a newly discovered island in the
Pacific to stand for Ireland's "brutal and unholy soiling" at the hands of English rule. After a drunken incident in which he was assaulted and verbally abused by an English soldier, Dunphy became more politically aware. The incident was
143:. Dunphy claims to have considered incinerating the draft of the novel before a chance encounter with Joyce, in which the author spoke words of encouragement. The two were to remain lifelong friends and colleagues, with Joyce helping the novel to be published in London by
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had him released as a 'political prisoner'. Although only detained for six months, Dunphy was heavily traumatised by his experiences in prison and began to define himself as explicitly 'anti-British'. During this period, he took up some writing in the
331:, Dunphy's activities in the Seanad were reduced after about 1957 and he last attended a session in February 1961. Dunphy's final years were lived in poor health and were largely spent being cared for by his wife Margaret on their farm in
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his sexuality. In 1936, Dunphy married the dairy heiress
Margaret Donohoe, a woman fourteen years his junior. Dunphy's biographer suggests Donohoe was a lesbian and their relationship was a
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in many parts, if not in its entirety. It has been copied here solely for the purpose of documenting hoaxes on
Knowledge (XXG), in order to improve our detection and understanding of them.
311:, which Dunphy staunchly opposed. He pointed out that his mother was half-Jewish and he lobbied for Ireland to give moral and material support to displaced Jews after the war.
117:, where he excelled academically and was extremely popular with fellow students. Dunphy progressed to postgraduate study, which he abandoned to take a teaching job in Paris.
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candidate Pádraig Dunphy and his mother was
Catherine Dubont, the daughter of French diplomats. After attending private school, Dunphy went on to study English literature at
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299:. His reception remained warmer in nationalist circles, especially as his work moved towards the political arena once more. He advocated Irish
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Having lost his lecturing job as a result of being imprisoned, Dunphy again turned his hand to translation. He translated several classical
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for publishing an article in which it was insinuated that he was a homosexual; the case collapsed but the presiding judge was accused by
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Back in Dublin, Dunphy began teaching at his alma mater to supplement his income while he began to write The Island, an overtly
88:, Dunphy's distinctive voice made him a significant public political figure, as well as one of the chief chroniclers of
80:; 12 September 1888 – 19 December 1963) was an Irish writer, translator. and political activist. A prominent member of
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to be read in the language for the first time. He also undertook the first Irish language translation of
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as a conscious effort to circumvent the hegemony of the
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the same year. However, his critical stock declined, with the young
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to publish the work in Paris. In 1919, Dunphy attempted to sue the
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While teaching
English in Paris, Dunphy began writing the novel
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after months of slow progress. In 1915, the spread of
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510:. Manchester: Manchester University Press. p. 354.
314:In 1951, Dunphy was nominated as a member of the
295:writing a scathing review of Dunphy's 1940 novel
18:Knowledge (XXG):List of hoaxes on Knowledge (XXG)
283:in 1937 and completing translations of works by
50:Please do not create hoaxes on Knowledge (XXG).
235:. A manuscript was smuggled out of Ireland by
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179:. Around this time, Dunphy became a member of
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360:. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 216.
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495:. London: Faber and Faber. p. 123.
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335:. He died on 19 December 1963 of
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450:. Paris: Internationale. p. 36.
523:A Life Thwarted: Ciarán Dunphy
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405:. Dublin: Liffey Press. p. 67.
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435:. Cardiff: Albertine. p. 77.
420:. London: Continuum. p. 300.
401:Ni Ceallaigh, Aoife (1999).
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