Songs My Mother Taught Me: New Light on James Macpherson’s <i>Ossian</i>

Authors

  • Ian Woodfield Queen's University Belfast

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35561/JSMI16211

Keywords:

Bunting, Burney, Ossian, William Crotch, James Oswald, James Macpherson, John Sinclair

Abstract

With the publication in 1762 of Fingal, the ancient epic poem James Macpherson claimed to have reconstructed from Erse sources, scholarly warfare broke out. The hitherto unassailable Irish bard Oisín was unexpectedly confronted with a rival Scottish claimant to the authorship of the Fionn Mac Cumhaill saga: Ossian. A consensus quickly emerged among outraged Irish antiquarians that Macpherson was a very clever fraudster who had ‘usurped the Fenian cycles of Gaelic Ireland’ for commercial gain. The controversy refused to die down, and half a century later there was still no final verdict on the alleged hoax.  This article provides fresh perspectives on this controversy. 

Author Biography

Ian Woodfield, Queen's University Belfast

Ian Woodfield is Professor of Historical Musicology at Queen's University Belfast (School of Arts, English and Languages). 

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Published

13-06-2021

How to Cite

Woodfield, I. (2021). Songs My Mother Taught Me: New Light on James Macpherson’s <i>Ossian</i>. Journal of the Society for Musicology in Ireland, 16, 3–32. https://doi.org/10.35561/JSMI16211

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Section

Articles