Irvine_Welsh Irvine_Welsh

Irvine Welsh - Definition and Overview

Irvine Welsh, reading one of his new short stories at the
Enlarge
Irvine Welsh, reading one of his new short stories at the Edinburgh International Book Festival

Irvine Welsh (born Leith, Edinburgh, September 27, 1961) is a Scottish novelist probably best known for his novel Trainspotting, about a group of heroin addicts' attempts to quit using the drug.

Contents

Style

Irvine Welsh is known for writing mostly, but not exclusively, in his native Edinburgh Scots dialect. He wrote this and other dialects phonetically often ignoring the traditional orthographic practices of Scots literacy. Although many authors have attempted to capture working class Scottish vernacular, it has proved notoriously difficult to reproduce in print. In this respect, Welsh is the master. Non-Scottish readers may have difficulty deciphering the language, and will certainly miss the symbolism and subtleties related to football, sectarianism and Scottish everyday life which are particularly prevalent in Marabou Stork Nightmares and Filth.

Themes

Welsh is often labelled as a writer whose work concentrates on heroin addiction. However, in his fiction and non-fiction writing, what it is to be working class and Scottish in the period spanning the 60s to the present day could more accurately be said to be the dominant theme. The rise and fall of the council housing scheme, denial of opportunity, sectarianism, football, hooliganism, suppressed homosexuality, dance clubs, low paid work, freemasonry, Irish republicanism, drug use, sodomy, class division, emigration, and perhaps most of all- the humour, prejudice and axioms of the Scottish, are the mainstays of Welsh's writing.

Novels

Drama

  • You'll Have Had Your Hole

Screenplay

  • "Dose" (http://bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2003/07_july/15/wales_dose.shtml) Half Hour BBC drama written with Dean Cavanagh.

External link


Copyright 2009 WordIQ.com - Privacy Policy  :: Terms of Use  :: Contact Us  :: About Us
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the this Wikipedia article.