Robert Anthony Welch


Robert Anthony Welch was an Irish author and scholar.

Biography

Robert Anthony Welch was Emeritus Professor of English in the Faculty of Arts and former Dean of the Faculty at the University of Ulster. He joined the University in 1984 as Professor of English and head of the School of English, Media, and Theatre Studies having previously taught at the School of English, University of Leeds, and the University of Ife in Nigeria.
He was born in Cork, Ireland, and was educated at University College Cork and later the University of Leeds. He took his Master's at Cork University under Sean Lucy and then went to study for his PhD under Yeats scholar A N Jeffares at Leeds University,. where he also held a Lectureship in English. His research was on the interaction between Gaelic tradition and Irish poetry in English, a field in which he achieved wide recognition and which was given special mention in the citation that led to his election to membership of the Royal Irish Academy in 2008.
He was married to Angela O'Riordan and they had four children, including thatre director Rachel O'Riordan. A novelist and poet as well as a critic and editor, he published The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature in 1996, a book which appeared on the No. 1 best sellers list.

Poetry

His first published volume of poetry was Muskerry followed by Secret Societies and The Blue Formica Table, and The Evergreen Road. A new collection titled Constanza was published in July 2010. In 2009 he was the recipient of the O'Connor Literary Award in Monasterevin, County Kildare at the Gerard Manley Hopkins summer school.

Fiction

His fiction includes The Kilcolman Notebook followed by Tearmann and Groundwork which was named in The New York Times Book Review as one of the Notable Books of 1998 and was translated and serialised for Slovakian national radio. Japhy Ryder: Ar Shleasaibh na Mangartan, a book of biographical and critical studies, won the Oireachteas prize for prize in 2011.
Two stories from a forthcoming collection The Trap of their Hexes appeared in The Dublin Review; a further story from the same collection appeared in the Irish Pages. Kicking the Black Mamba: Life, Death, Alcohol and Death, a memoir of his son Egan who drowned in 2007, was published in September 2012 by Darton, Longman and Todd. The book prompted significant attention from paper, internet, radio and television media on its release and posthumously achieved the number one position amongst RTÉ best sellers; referred to as 'masterpiece of memoir-writing' by reviewer Paddy Kenoe.

Criticism

His critical work began in 1980 with Irish Poetry from Moore to Yeats, which charted for the first time the achievements of the major poets of the Irish nineteenth century leading to the work of W B Yeats. This was followed by other work, which includes A History of Verse Translation from the Irish: 1789–1897, Changing States: Transformations in Modern Irish Writing. His history of the Abbey Theatre, Dublin, was published in 1999 to mark the centenary of the first productions of what became the Irish National Theatre. This was titled A History of the Abbey Theatre 1899–1999: Form and Pressure. He edited for Penguin Books W B Yeats: Writings on Irish Folklore, Legend, and Myth. The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature appeared in 1996 followed by a Concise version in 2000. Other editorial work included Patrick Galvin: New and Selected Poems. This volume includes notes and an introduction jointly authored. He wrote the introduction to Rogha Danta/Death in the Land of Youth: New and Selected Poems of Seán Ó Tuama. His first posthumous release, The Cold of Mayday Monday was released in 2014 and considered to be a 'major achievement of scholarship and narrative'.

Editor

He was general editor of a series published by Colin Smythe entitled Ulster Editions and Monographs, which now runs to 16 volumes. With Professor Brian Walker of Queen's University Belfast, he was general editor of the five-volume series The Oxford History of the Irish Book from Oxford University Press. Volume three, entitled The Irish Book in English 1550–1800, appeared in 2006, edited by Raymond Gillespie and Andrew Hadfield. Volume five, entitled The Irish Book in English 1890–2000, appeared in 2010, edited by Clare Hutton and Patrick Walsh.

Playwright

His play Protestants was commissioned by Ransom Productions in 2004 and premiered at The Old Museum Arts Centre in Belfast and toured to Northern Ireland, the West End, and Edinburgh. In 2010 he was commissioned by Ransom Productions to write one part of a double bill entitled Both sides alongside David Ireland which was opened in the Lyric Theatre.

Accolades

In 1992, he was awarded the Oireachtas Prize for criticism, and in 2003 he was made Senior Distinguished Research Fellow of the University of Ulster. In 2008 he was awarded membership to the Royal Irish Academy. In 2009 he was awarded the O'Connor Award at the Gerard Manley Hopkins Literature Festival in Kildare, Ireland.

Published works