A Great Feast of Light: Growing Up Irish in the Television Age

A Great Feast of Light: Growing Up Irish in the Television Age

by JohnDoyle (Author)

Synopsis

When John Doyle was born in a remote part of Tipperary the Catholic church was all-powerful in Ireland, suspicious of the outside world and enjoining its citizenry to piety. And then in 1961, television arrived, bringing Westerns, hilarious American sitcoms like I Love Lucy , advertisements for gleaming cars and barbecues. Soon Gay Byrne's Late Late Show was hosting outspoken discussions on sex and religion and even, unthinkably, criticism of the church. Suddenly, the outside world, with its glamour, its violence, its fun, laughter and liberation, had come to Ireland. Then when Doyle and his family moved nearer the border with Northern Ireland they could pick up the BBC, the broadcasting institution of what he and his fellow Irish had always thought of as the hateful English oppressors - but who now, he discovered, were responsible for such revelatory programmes as Monty Python, and brought live football with the peerless George Best. This is a touching story of how TV caused nothing less than a social revolution, and enabled one man to enter the modern world.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Publisher: Aurum Press
Published: 01 Sep 2007

ISBN 10: 1845132599
ISBN 13: 9781845132590

Media Reviews
* (A) gentle, funny book... crackles with unexpected angles, and is written with a kind of naive delight' John Carey, Sunday Times * 'A beautiful piece of writing' Gay Byrne * 'A witty and touching memoir' Irish Independent * 'I had to stop reading several times because I was laughing hysterically' Malachy McCourt * 'He writes the best kind of cultural history, based not on statistics and generalisations but on first-hand experiences' John Carey, Sunday Times
Author Bio
John Doyle attended University Colleage, Dublin before emigrating to Canada in 1980.