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Manchán Magan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Manchán Magan is an Irish writer, traveller, author, and television programme maker.

Career

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Magan has made over 70 travel documentaries focusing on issues of world cultures and globalisation, 12 of them packaged under the Global Nomad series[1] with his brother Ruán Magan.[2]

He presented No Béarla, a documentary series about travelling around Ireland speaking only Irish. He writes regularly for The Irish Times[3] and presents the podcast/radio show 'The Almanac of Ireland', on RTÉ Radio 1[4]

He has written three books in Irish, Baba-ji agus TnaG, Manchán ar Seachrán and Bí i nGrá. His English travel books include Angels & Rabies: A Journey through the Americas, Manchán's Travels: A Journey through India, and Truck Fever: A Journey through Africa.[5] In 2009 he spent time as a writer in residence with the Irish Cultural Centre, at the Irish College in Paris.

In 2020, Magan published Thirty Two Words for Field: Lost words of the Irish landscape.[6][7] In 2021 he published the children's book Tree Dogs, Banshee Fingers and Other Words for Nature with illustrations by Steve Doogan. And in 2022 his book Listen to the Land Speak was published by Gill Books.[8]

His television series include Crainn na hÉireann, a 10-part series on the trees of Ireland,[9] and An Fód Deireannach, a four-part series for TG4 about Irish bogs and peatland.[10]

Background

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Magan was brought up in Donnybrook, Dublin, he went to Mount Anville Montessori School before attending Gonzaga College in Ranelagh (he also spent one year in Colaiste Rhinne), before going to University College Dublin to study Irish and History.[11]

Magan's family background was nationalist and closely associated with the foundation of the Irish State in that he is the grandson of Sheila Humphreys and great-grandnephew of The O'Rahilly.[12] He has explored these connections in various documentaries for TG4 and RTÉ.[citation needed]

Magan stood unsuccessfully for the Green Party in the Longford–Westmeath constituency in 2016.[13] He built and lived in a strawbale house, which he removed and replaced with a mud and cement, grass-roofed house, in County Westmeath.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Global Nomad - Manchán Magan.
  2. ^ Ruan Magan Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ The Irish Times, "Magan's World".
  4. ^ RTÉ Radio 1, The Almanac of Ireland'
  5. ^ Manchán Magan Books and Short Bio Archived 16 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. ^ Kehoe, Paddy (12 September 2020). "Reviewed: Thirty Two Words for Field by Manchán Magan". RTE. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  7. ^ "32 Words for Field - manchan.com". manchan.com. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  8. ^ "Listen to the Land Speak".
  9. ^ "Crainn na hÉireann (The Trees of Ireland) Series Trailer". YouTube.
  10. ^ "| Player | TG4 | Irish Television Channel, Súil Eile".
  11. ^ Too Cool for School, Education, Irish Times, January 28, 2008.
  12. ^ See e.g., http://humphrysfamilytree.com/Humphrys/raid.1922.html
  13. ^ "Longford–Westmeath: 2016 general election Results, Counts, Transfers".
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