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One Foot in a Spanish Grave: Eugene Downing's Memoir of the International Brigades in Spain

Contributor(s): Downing, Eugene (Author), McLoughlin, Barry (Editor), Ó Haodha, Mícheál (Translator), McLoughlin, Barry (Introduction by), Byrne, Brendan (Contribution by)

ISBN: 9781910820766

Publisher: University College Dublin Press

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Pub Date: December 20, 2023

LCCN: 2023526118

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Illustrated, Index, Maps

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.41" H x 9.61" L x 6.91" W ( 0.25 lbs) 300 pages

Series: Writings from the Laureate for Irish Fiction

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: The first English-language translation of the memoirs of Eugene Downing.

Eugene Downing (1913-2003) was not your usual Irish brigader: a communist from his teenage years, an urbanized skilled worker, and an Irish language enthusiast. Downing had no immediate Republican record, joining the communist Workers Groups in Dublin just out of his apprenticeship as an electrician. Despite this backdrop, Downing spent nine months in the International Brigades Spain before being invalided home (amputated lower left leg) in December 1938.

One Foot in a Spanish Grave: Eugene Downing's Memoir of the International Brigades in Spain--published in the Irish language as La Nina Bonita agus An Róisín Dubh: Cuimhní Cinn ar Chogadh Cathartha na Spáinne--has been long worthy of a translation into English. The structure of the original Irish text has been altered slightly, with some appendices omitted. Translated by Micheál Ó hAodha, edited and introduced by Barry McLoughlin, One Foot in a Spanish Grave begins with Brendan Byrne, Eugene's nephew, sharing his memories of a highly non-conformist uncle.

Downing's portrayal of life in the International Brigades is often humorous, greatly generous when judging others, but ultimately critical of political zealotry. He proves himself to be a wry observer of his fellow volunteers and of his own youthful militancy in the virulently anti-communist Dublin of the 1930s.

Brief description: Barry McLoughlin retired as a senior lecturer in Irish and contemporary history at Vienna University in 2016. He is the author of Left to the Wolves: Irish Victims of Stalinist Terror and coauthor or editor of five books on aspects of Stalinism and Soviet State terror.

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