Paul Brennan (1939-2003) was an Irish scholar and journal founder and editor.
Life
Paul Brennan was born in County Roscommon in Ireland in 1939 and died in 2003.
After earning a BA in History from NUI Galway, Brennan left Ireland for France in 1963 and read for an English degree at the Sorbonne. He lived in Paris, meeting his wife Nicole in 1965. In May 1968, they both took part in the student protests in Paris. In 1969 was appointed as a lecturer in the English department at the Sorbonne, later dividing his time between the departments of Irish Studies at Caen University in Normandy, which he headed, and at the Paris III campus of the Sorbonne Nouvelle university.
He created a journal called L’Irlande politique et sociale and for years was co-editor of Etudes irlandaises. He was the long-term vice-president of the CAPES, the competitive recruiting exam for French secondary-school teachers, and President of the SOFEIR (Société Française d’Etudes Irlandaises) for six years.
In 1988 Brennan made an extended appearance on the Channel 4 discussion programme After Dark alongside, among others, Roy Bradford, Henry Kelly, DeLores Tucker, Eamonn McCann and Glenn Barr. In 2021 this programme received a cinema screening during the Docs Ireland documentary festival in Belfast.
Paul Brennan is remembered as one of the main movers behind the growth of Irish studies at French universities.
References
- Obituary, Sylvie Mikowski, journal of The International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures, accessed 21 December 2021
- An Irishman's Diary, Andy Pollak, The Irish Times 16 July 1996, accessed 21 December 2021
- In Memoriam Paul Brennan, Bertrand Cardin and Alexandra Slaby, Études irlandaises, 40-1, 2015, accessed 21 December 2021
- 'Docs Ireland to host ‘Derry Days’ celebration Archived 19 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine', Derry Journal,18 August 2021, accessed 19 August 2021
External links
- An Irishman's Diary, Andy Pollak, The Irish Times 16 July 1996, accessed 21 December 2021
- Obituary, Sylvie Mikowski, journal of The International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures, 2004, accessed 21 December 2021
- In Memoriam Paul Brennan, Bertrand Cardin and Alexandra Slaby, Études irlandaises, 40-1, 2015, accessed 21 December 2021