Guth Thormoid: Norman’s VoiceIsland Voices at NATECLA 2025

The Island Voices project is featured in the new book “Foundational approaches to Celtic Linguistics“, through a chapter on the late Norman Maclean by Gordon Wells. This volume is a first venture into current issues in Celtic linguistics for the free open access academic publisher, Language Science Press.

From the editors’ preface:

Gordon Wells’ chapter (Guth Thormoid: The “Island voice” of Norman MacLean) provides a case study that highlights the exceptional value of working closely with an experienced native speaker to not only provide linguistic data but to document vanishing cultures and values also impacted with language loss.

And here’s Gordon’s abstract:

This chapter samples and contextualises some of the multi-faceted Gaelic contributions by the multi-talented creative icon, Norman Maclean, to the Guthan nan Eilean ‘Island Voices’ online language capture and curation project. These include, in particular, Norman’s final Saoghal Thormoid ‘Norman’s World’ series of videoed conversations, recorded in April 2016 in which he spoke reflectively of his memories and impressions of bilingual life in Glasgow and the Hebrides from the middle of the Twentieth Century onwards. In addition to offering a vivid first-person voiced and experiential account of Gaelic life over a tumultuous period for the language, the Island Voices adherence to basic linguistic principles pays dividends in relation to some initially unpredicted spin-off applications, with potential for further development.

We’re delighted to see this account of our work with Norman placed online for unrestricted reading by anyone who may take an interest, and we’re very grateful to Andrew Carnie and the whole editorial team at the University of Arizona who made that possible. Mòran taing dhuibh uile!

Online publication also means, of course, that live links can be incorporated in the text, so that readers can quickly and easily sample the recordings referred to at the click of a mouse. This is no small consideration for a primarily speech-oriented project like Guthan nan Eilean!

You can freely find the article at this DOI: https://zenodo.org/records/15654881

The full Saoghal Thormoid transcripts, with description of method and a foreword by Professor Conchúr Ó Giollagáin are available in PDF format from the Island Voices Research/Reports page.

The recently completed Island Voices project “Multilingual Memories: Birmingham 1984” was on prominent display at this year’s annual conference of NATECLA, the National Association for Teaching English and Other Community Languages to Adults, held in Birmingham on 27th and 28th June. Project representatives Harmesh Manghra (first on left) and Sardul Dhesi (second from right) are joined in the picture by Paul Sceeny, NATECLA co-chair, and Mary Osmaston, trustee of the association.

With QR codes incorporated in the display poster, as well as on leaflets for each of the 350 conference packs, conference participants were enabled to view any of the 22 recordings in the 13 different languages in the collection on their own devices and at their own convenience.

Over the years, NATECLA has consistently lobbied and argued for due attention to be paid to the other languages used in the UK beside English. As Industrial Language Training (ILT) practitioners in Birmingham back in the 1980s, both Harmesh and Sardul, alongside others, were involved in onsite language training in factories and other workplaces across the city. The Island Voices documentary, in tracing the life stories of ILT workers and how their careers developed and diversified, reinforces the point that multilingualism is an established fact of UK life, and always has been.

With Mary also running a workshop on using other languages in the English language classroom, it was an opportunity not to be missed to profile some of these languages in actual use through these Island Voices recordings. Many thanks to NATECLA for accommodating us!