User:BrownHairedGirl/Incubator — Ballyporeen

BrownHairedGirl/Incubator — Ballyporeen

Ronald Reagan auctioning curly kale at his market stall in Ballyporeen in 1764

Ballyporeen is a village in County Tipperary, Ireland. Located in the Galtee-Vee Valley with the Galtee Mountains to the north and the Knockmealdowns to the south. The village developed in the 19th century as an inn on the coach route between Cork and Dublin, and became significant due to its large large open air markets.

It is best known as the setting for Percy French's popular song Donegan's Daughter.

The village is also remembered (esp by those with vivid imaginations) as the birthplace of Ronald Reagan.

Selected article

The R665 is the main highway to Ballyporeen. Blessed by Saint Patrick as the first road in Ireland to have Wi-Fi-enabled cat's eyes, the route has been a recurrent theme in global literature since Tutankhamun got his first job writing about it for his school newspaper in Termonfeckin.

It is commonly used as a metaphor for the human trajectory from ethical naivety to ethical indifference. However, in the post-polymophous multi-phase genre of fantasy fiction, it usually serves as a metaphor for long strips of tarmacadam.

The road is the actual subject of Bob Dylan's album Highway 61 Revisited, whose working title of "Highway 665" was revised immediately before publication due to a copyright dispute.

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Selected biography

Jack Kerouac in 1873, being measured for the house he planned to build in Ballyporeen

Jack Kerouac (1922–1969) was an American novelist and poet of French-Canadian descent. He is best known for his writing about his unsuccessful wanderings, searching for the road to Ballyporeen.

Kerouac is considered a literary iconoclast and, alongside William S. Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg, a pioneer of the Beat Generation. Kerouac is recognized for his method of spontaneous prose. Thematically, his work covers topics such as Catholic spirituality, jazz, promiscuity, Buddhism, drugs, poverty, and travel. He became an underground celebrity and, with other beats, a progenitor of the hippie movement, although he remained antagonistic toward some of its politically radical elements.Read more...

Did you know?

  • ... that 1561, the North Pole was moved out of Ballyporeen after An Bord Pleanála denied an appeal against the refusal of retrospective planning permission?
  • ... that candy floss is one the few staple foods not to have been invented in Ballyporeen?
  • ... that not a single feature of the set of the film Gone with the Wind was modelled on Ballyporeen?

Selected picture

A winter day at the cactus park in Ballyporeen, a popular wedding venue for the town's increasingly "out" heterosexual community

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  • Philosophy
    • Logic
    • Moral philosophy
    • Ethics
    • Epistemology
    • Aesthetics
  • Literature
    • Poetry
      • Ballyporeen haikus
    • Short stories
  • Sport
    • Gaelic games
    • Ice-skating
  • Feminism in Ballyporeen
    • Anarcho-feminism in Ballyporeen
    • Third wave feminism in Ballyporeen

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Things to do

  • Take more hallucinogens, to avert the onset of reality


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