📖 Sobre Rosaleen
Rosaleen é a forma inglesa do irlandês Róisín ('rosinha'), carregando o imenso peso da tradição alegórica da Rosaleen Escura — a Irlanda personificada como uma jovem morena — cristalizada na canção do século XVII Róisín Dubh e na famosa tradução de 1846 de James Clarence Mangan; a heroína gótica Rosaleen de Angela Carter acrescenta uma dimensão feroz e feminista a esta tradição.
📍 Detalhes
- OrigemIrish
- Gênero♀ Feminino
- SignificadoVariant of Roisin. Little rose
🔀 Variantes e Nomes Relacionados
⭐ Pessoas Famosas
- Róisín Dubh / Dark Rosaleen (national symbol) — The great Irish allegorical tradition of personifying Ireland as a dark young woman named Róisín Dubh (Dark Rosaleen); rooted in 17th-century poetry and song, the 'dark Rosaleen' encodes Ireland's longing for liberation from English rule, her Catholic faith, and her ancient sovereignty; alongside Cathleen Ni Houlihan and Gráinne, Rosaleen is one of the central female archetypes through which Irish national identity has been imagined and expressed for four centuries.
- James Clarence Mangan — Irish Romantic poet (1803–1849), whose 1846 translation of the old Irish song Róisín Dubh under the title Dark Rosaleen became one of the most celebrated poems in the Irish literary tradition; published during the Great Famine, it gave Rosaleen her definitive English-language form and her place as a symbol of Irish nationalist longing; W. B. Yeats called it one of the greatest poems written in English.
- Rosaleen Norton — Australian occultist artist (1917–1979), known as 'The Witch of King's Cross' for her openly pagan life in Sydney's bohemian district; her paintings depicted gods, demons, and erotic ritual in a style blending Art Nouveau with surrealism; she was prosecuted for obscenity multiple times (1949, 1953, 1956) but refused to recant or conform; she became a celebrated figure of Australian counterculture and a pioneer of openly practised paganism in the Southern Hemisphere.
- Rosaleen (Angela Carter / Neil Jordan) — The protagonist of The Company of Wolves (1979), a story in Angela Carter's landmark collection The Bloody Chamber; a bold, fearless reinterpretation of Little Red Riding Hood in which Rosaleen meets the wolf not with terror but with confidence and desire; Neil Jordan's 1984 film adaptation made Rosaleen an icon of Gothic feminist cinema; Carter's Rosaleen reclaims the name from passive symbol to active heroine.