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ATLANTEAN, in the Bob Quinn version, is not a fanciful tale of a
submerged continent.
It is a pragmatic elucidation of Irish identity using much the same
sources and scholarship that have been available for the past 2000 years
to scholars and writers. The thesis is refreshing in that it states that
the Irish are not a homogenous fiction called 'celtic' but an energetic
mongrel people inhabiting what for thousands of years has essentially
been an island trading post.
This brings them at least as close to the Arabs and Berbers as they
are to so-called 'Celts' or 'Aryans'.
ATLANTEAN can be viewed as an anti-racist polemic but because the
first edition was printed over 16 years ago - before Ireland became an
uneasily cosmopolitan society - it is much more than that.
The basic principle is that the sea does not divide peoples - it
unites all countries and all races.
The project began innocently enough when, twenty years ago, an Irish
film maker, Bob Quinn, set out to show that the singing style of his
neighbours in Gaelic-speaking Conamara in the West of Ireland was much
more than a debased and incomprehensible version of ballad-singing -
which was the attitude of anglophones. He showed how similar it was to
North African and Afro-Asian singing and daringly went on to draw
historic, religious, artistic, archaeological and linguistic
similarities with Hamito-Semitic cultures
A trilogy of films ensued. They won prizes, were acclaimed
internationally. The film maker wrote a book on the subject. The book
has recently been revised, rewritten and published under the new title "Atlantean
Irish: Ireland's Oriental and Maritime Heritage" (Lilliput Press, Dublin
2005)
Irish people who had an interest in maritime affairs - such as John
de Courcy Ireland and Tim Severin - were delighted
'In megalithic times the Irish sea was
bright with argonauts'
From the 9th century the Vikings ruled the waves
A thousand years later the pirate corsairs from North Africa
maintained the tradition
Atlantean showed that the island of Ireland was never a remote
outpost on the fringes of Europe. From the hunters and fishermen of the
megalithic age to the investors and carpetbaggers of the modern age,
from Eastern monks fleeing persecution to establishment clerics, from
the Mediterranean to the Baltic, the island has always been regarded as
a lucrative trading post and a desirable residence.
Traditional Irish musicians loved the idea, felt it endorsed their
natural instinct to explore rhythms and harmonies hitherto considered
un-Irish.
The response to the films and the book was intriguing:
Old fashioned academics maintained a public silence while privately
attacking the thesis.
Serious scholars with imagination were pleased that a
hitherto-repressed perspective on Ireland had seen the light of day -
again.
The questioning nature of the Irish psyche has ensured that there is
still a demand for the films and the book both at home and
internationally.
The Atlantean Quartet of films is newly available on DVD, from
this site
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