| 
 
          
            | Arthur
            Terry: a festschrift richly deserved |  
            |  |  
            | Estudis de llengua i literatura catalanes, XXXV, Homenatge a Arthur Terry, 1. Publicacions
            de lAbadia de Montserrat, Barcelona, 1997, 276 pp., ISBN: 84-7826-894-4.
 
 |  As a great majority of international Catalanists will attest it is extremely difficult
        when working in this "minority" subject to achieve the academic recognition
        which is so rightfully attained by those colleagues whose research interests encompass
        spheres of a more massified nature. For such appreciation to be forthcoming one either has
        to be very fortunate or  and this is a far more difficult proposition  to
        enjoy the immense investigatory stature of Arthur Terry. Indeed, what remains surprising
        in this respect is that we have had to wait so long for the reward of the present festschrift
        to be bestowed upon this veritable giant of the Catalan critical arena. As Joan Veny outlines in his affectionate introductory preamble, there are few scholars
        more worthy of such a homage. As is duly explained, the track record of this distinguished
        intellectual is, first and foremost, without equal in the field of the defence of the
        Catalan cultural identity: "Terry és un exemple de fidelitat a la nostra cultura. El
        1949 ja prenia contacte amb el nostre poble i era testimoni de les vexacions i
        insolències de què era objecte. Participà en reunions literàries clandestines i
        col.laborà en revistes que sortosament aconseguien sortejar la censura. Va restar seduït
        per un poble que havia reeixit a conservar un alt sentit de la dignitat humana i del
        valor de les seves pròpies tradicions". (6) This constancy of purpose was to
        continue throughout a distinguished career, including such onerous though prestigious
        charges as the Secretaryship and Presidency of the Anglo-Catalan Society (the position of
        Treasurer did not exist at that time) and the Presidency of the AILLC from 1982 to 1988. Restrictions of space do not allow for any equitable synopsis of this academics
        production in the critical sphere. It might best be summed up simply as awesome: not only
        for the extent of the erudition but, more impressively, for its penetration and
        sensitivity which has never failed to impress successive generations of students of the
        work of March, Brossa, Ferrater, Foix, Manent, Maragall, Riba, Xirau, i un llarg
        etcètera. Veny is also entirely correct to refer to the tutorial dimension of
        Terrys magisterial office; and both these professorial aspects are elicited with
        eloquence and accuracy: "els seus alumnes...guarden records inesborrables dun
        mestre modèlic: oceànica erudició, profunda sensibilitat, diafanitat expositiva, humor,
        suau, bondat. Una bondat que lha portat sempre a atencions desinteressades vers els
        seus deixebles, britànics i catalans". (6) The only qualifier absent from this
        pupilary list is, of course, the adjective "Irish". That oversight
        notwithstanding, the present reviewer is pleased to endorse most sincerely  and with
        the authority of personal experience  the sentiments described above. As as result, it is entirely fitting that the this volume should impress with the
        soundness of its scholarship  reflecting the breadth of Professor Terrys
        interests  and the category of its contributors. Germà Colón provides an
        interesting etymological study of vellós as it appears in a passage from Espill
        and the philological dimension is completed with essays by Rabella, Piquer and Dols who
        deal with the Greuges de Guitart Isarn, applied linguistics and phonology
        repectively. As might be expected from the nature of the volume, the emphasis on literary
        topics is more pronounced with the surveys by Curt Wittlin on Southeys 1807 critique
        of the Tirant and Eulàlia Duran on the reception of March in the sixteenth century
        proving absolutely fascinating. Though all the contributions in this sphere are worthy of
        note, it would not be unfair to isolate those which deal with more specifically
        "Terrian" themes as would be the essays by Gascón and Almirall on the
        intimacies and intricacies of the Renaixença experience, Alpera on Sánchez
        Cutillas, Madrenas and Ribera on Sindreu, and Camps on the reception of Montale by
        Hispanic letters. From the number in the title of the work it may be inferred that more volumes of the festschrift
        are planned. These are only to be awaited with expectation given both the eminence of the homenatjat
        and also the quality of the articles on offer in this edition.   |